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Erdogan versus Gulen battle now spills over into Bosnia’s

July 22, 2016 By administrator

Bosnia controlBy Gordana Knezevic

July 22, 2016

As if Bosnia did not have enough of its own problems, it is at risk of becoming embroiled in the increasingly fraught domestic struggles of Turkey. The country’s friendship with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is certain to come under strain because of the extensive network of Fethullah Gulen’s schools scattered across the country.

In January 2015, Erdogan had asked for the closure of the entire network of Gulen’s schools in Bosnia, according to the Bosnian daily Avaz. Apart from the capital Sarajevo, they are present in all the major centers in the Muslim-Croat Federation — Bihac, Zenica, Tuzla, and Mostar. The request was not sent through regular diplomatic channels, but directly to the ruling Muslim Party of Democratic Action (SDA) run by Bakir Izetbegovic.

Gulen schools have been active in Bosnia since 1997. Several hundred flats, kindergartens, high schools, and universities are part of the network. The most prominent are the International Burch University in Sarajevo and the Una-Sana college in northern Bosnia.

The Gulen movement is dedicated to investing in education for the lower and middle classes. The movement states its purpose is to impart the moral values of Islam, as well as subjects such as mathematics, physics, and chemistry, with a view to forming a new Turkish elite and eradicating the secular ideas of Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the modern Turkish state. 

Postwar Bosnia has been an important playground for Turkish politicians. With Erdogan keen to revive memories of his country’s imperial heritage, the former Ottoman province could be an ideal stage for Turkey to flex its muscles as a regional power.

There is a new geopolitical context, as well. Since the war (1992-1995), Bosnian Serbs have been looking to Serbia as their “motherland,” and Bosnia as a kind of “temporary home.” It is similar with the Bosnian Croats. Croatia is the “homeland” and their presence in Bosnia seen as merely accidental. Squeezed between the two, many Bosnian Muslims have turned to Turkey. Turkish flags are often waved by young fans in the streets of Bosnian cities following sporting victories.

However, Turkey’s patronage of Bosnia’s Muslim community is more apparent than real. It is a myth that Turkey is the biggest investor in Bosnia. In fact, Austria tops the list and Turkey is not even among the top 10 investors in the country. But Turkey did help with the restoration of the famous Old Bridge in Mostar. It was also involved in the latter stages of another landmark project, the reconstruction of Banja Luka’s Ferhadija mosque, opened on May 7, 2016.

In other words, Turkish investments in Bosnia are token by comparison with other countries, but they are focused on the rebuilding of highly symbolic structures from the Ottoman period, which were destroyed in the war. Such perceived expressions of “brotherly love” between Turkey and the Bosnian Muslims are viewed askance by Belgrade — even though Turkish investments are far higher in Serbia and Croatia.

In terms of foreign education, however, Turkey dominates — for now, at least. A few months ago, the official line from Sarajevo’s International Burch University was that as an institution of higher education it was founded and run in accordance with local regulations, and was subject to oversight by the Bosnian authorities. There has been no comment since the ongoing crisis in Turkey began to unfold, with the government’s crackdown on alleged Gulenist supporters including thousands of teachers and university deans.

The Turkish Embassy in Sarajevo has previously disowned the Gulenist educational network in Bosnia, stating that “the Turkish state has no link with Bosna Sema [a Gulen school],” and asking Bosnian citizens to be wary.

The same appeal for caution was issued by Salmir Kaplan, the former culture and sports minister in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, one of the country’s two constituent entities. Kaplan had first-hand experience of the Gulen schools and has said he was struck by their cult-like aspects. Others, like Slavo Kukic, a professor in Mostar, have pointed to the absence of any educational standards. It is too easy for anyone to open a university in Bosnia, Kukic told RFE/RL’s Balkan Service:

“The first universities and schools [after the war] were started in gas stations. They did not have space. Now they are producing PhDs. The way it seems to work is — enroll on Thursday and graduate by Saturday, metaphorically speaking. We will pay for this [laxity] in the next decade.”

For Bosnia, the proliferation of foreign educational institutions, in the form of Gulenist schools, has thus far seemed more benign than the parallel invasion of Saudi-style mosques preaching a severe form of political Islam. But with events in Turkey escalating dramatically, Bosnia may find itself no longer a showcase for Turkish power and largesse, however token or symbolic, but a new battlefront in a suddenly furious domestic dispute.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: battle, Bosnia, Erdogan, Gulen, spills

Azerbaijani TV Station Closed Over ‘Interview’ With U.S.-Based Turkish Cleric Accused By Ankara In Coup

July 19, 2016 By administrator

Baku AzerbaijanBy RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service

July 19, 2016

A private Azerbaijani television station has been taken off the air and accused of damaging Baku’s “strategic” links with Turkey after announcing it would broadcast an interview with U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen.

Turkey’s government blames Gulen for orchestrating last weekend’s failed military coup, in which hundreds died and more than 1,500 more were injured when troops tried to oust President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Azerbaijan’s National Television and Radio Council (NTRC) on July 18 announced on its website that it was temporarily suspending the operations of private-owned ANS television while also filing legal action to revoke the station’s license.

“To avert provocations aimed at disrupting strategic relations between Azerbaijan and Turkey, and to prevent overt terrorist propaganda … it has been decided to suspend the operations of ANS television channel for one month,” said a July 18 statement posted on the council’s website.

Erdogan has repeatedly called for the cleric’s extradition from the United States since the plot was defeated.

Gulen has condemned the coup and denied involvement, and U.S. officials have said they would only consider an extradition request based on evidence of Gulen’s involvement.

ANS (Azerbaijani News Service) was founded in 1991, and it was the first privately owned independent television company in the former Soviet Union.

Although ANS is a staunchly pro-government station, the regulatory council said it would “file a lawsuit in court” to have the channel’s license withdrawn permanently.

The statement accused the channel of “propaganda aimed against the Turkish state and government” and claimed that it had depicted developments in Turkey as “a show staged by the Turkish government” while backing cleric Gulen.

It also said ANS “interviewed Gulen in the United States” and announced its intention to broadcast the interview in advance “through local and foreign media.”

In fact, Gulen spoke on July 16 — before the coup had been completely put down — at an impromptu news conference with multiple news outlets at his home in the remote village of Saylorsburg, in eastern Pennsylvania.

‘Fraternal Stance’

The statement said that Turkey’s embassy to Baku voiced “deep concern” over ANS’s intention to broadcast Gulen’s discussion with the media and called on Azerbaijani authorities “to take relevant measures.”

Both Azerbaijan and Turkey are Turkic nations and have generally enjoyed strong relations.

Azerbaijan’s authoritarian President Ilham Aliyev is a close Erdogan ally.

On July 18, Aliyev telephoned Erdogan to reassure him of his full support and “noted that Azerbaijan stands by the Turkish state and people, and fully supports the democratically elected Turkish government,” according to an Azerbaijani presidential statement that said Erdogan was “highly appreciative” of Aliyev’s “fraternal stance.”

In a separate move, Turkish authorities on July 19 scrapped all television and radio-station licenses linked to Gulen.

The broadcasting watchdog said it had “canceled all broadcasting rights and licenses for media that had links to FETO/PDY,” the acronym for the Gulen movement.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Gulen, Turkey, tv station

Will United State & Turkey go To war over Turkish IMAM Fethullah Gulen, “PM Yildirim threatened war”

July 17, 2016 By administrator

Erdogan and Gule bloody

Turkishness your friend today your enemy tomorrow Turkish Imam Gulen was Erdogan Islamic preacher now treasonous

Did Turkey Just Threaten War Against the United States After Failed Coup?

Turkish officials threaten to go to war with “any country” supporting exiled cleric Fethullah Gulen, the alleged mastermind of the coup plot, which would put the US right in Ankara’s crosshairs.

Prime Minister Binali Yildirim threated to go to war with any country that would “stand by” exiled Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, a resident of Pennsylvania in the United States who Washington refuses to extradite citing a lack of evidence that he was behind the attempted overthrow of the Erdogan government.

This appears to be a pointed threat against the United States with an implicit demand that Washington must extradite Gulen or face Ankara’s wrath. The provocative comments came after Turkish Labor Minister Suleyman Soylu shocked the world by accusing the America of manufacturing the overthrow effort.

“The US is behind the coup attempt. A few journals that are published there [in the US] have been conducting activites for several months. For many months we have sent requests to the US concerning Fethullah Gulen. The US must extradite him,” said the Labor Minister in a statement.

Secretary of State John Kerry responded by saying that Turkey has failed to provide sufficient evidence for the Obama administration to even consider their request to extradite the cleric. He also went on to condemn Ankara’s provocative statements saying that remarks alleging US involvement do serious harm to relations between the two countries.

State Department spokesman John Kirby said that during a conversation on Saturday evening with Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavosoglu, the Secretary of State warned Turkey to never make such an accusation. 

“He made clear that the United States would be willing to provide assistance to Turkish authorities conducting this investigation, but the public insinuations or claims about any role by the United States in the failed coup attempt are utterly false and harmful to our bilateral relations,” said Kirby.

The cleric allegedly behind the overthrow effort has also strongly condemned the coup.

“I condemn, in the strongest terms, the attempted military coup in Turkey. Government should be won through a process of free and fair elections, not force,” said Gulen to the New York Times. “As someone who suffered under multiple military coups during the past five decades, it is especially insulting to be accused of having any link to such an attempt. I categorically deny such accusations.”

Gulen later questioned whether the failed coup attempt was a legitimate effort to overthrow the government or political theater at the hands of Erdogan.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Gulen, Turkey, US, war

Texas: Turkish Imam Gülen-led charter schools in Texas accused of defrauding $18 million “VIDEO”

July 12, 2016 By administrator

Turkification WashingtonWASHINGTON – Anadolu Agency,

A chain of Turkish Imam Gülen  Texas charter schools linked to the movement of U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen has been accused of fraud and financial malfeasance worth over $18 million.

Amsterdam & Partners, a law firm investigating the movement’s activities, has filed a fraud complaint with the Texas Education Agency, the firm said in a statement late on July 11.

The complaint accused the public-funded school chain and another company, disguised as independent but in fact linked to Harmony Public Schools, of a complicated shell game in which Harmony seemed to contract the other company, but for the purposes of misappropriating funds rather than performing any actual services.        
Ankara has pressed the U.S. to extradite Gülen to stand trial for alleged crimes committed in Turkey.  

According to the website of the law firm’s founding partner Robert Amsterdam, Gülen “controls some 150 U.S. charter schools through opaque fronts… Gülen-affiliated Harmony Public Schools has been found to be allegedly engaging [in] widespread abuse of the H1B visa program, misappropriation of public funds and discrimination against certain students and families.”

According to the complaint, Harmony – which is financed by over $250 million in U.S. federal and state tax money annually – contracted a firm called Charter School Solutions (CSS) for $44 million to manage its buildings and properties.  

     

But the complaint alleges that CSS, far from being an independent company, was actually managed by a Harmony employee.

“For the purpose of new buildings to be rented by Harmony schools, an additional $18.4 million was paid to CSS,” said the law firm’s statement, which called the financial malfeasance “shocking.”

Amsterdam & Partners filed a formal complaint in late May against Harmony urging the Texas Education Agency to conduct a full investigation based on documented abuses suggesting a widespread pattern of fraud, discrimination and abuse in the Harmony network.

According to the law firm, Harmony operated seven charter school districts serving 46 charter campuses in Texas and had links to the “Hizmet movement,” led by Gülen, who was also believed to be responsible for forming a “parallel state” in Turkey.

Source: http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/gulen-led-schools-in-texas-accused-of-defrauding-18-million-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=101524&NewsCatID=358

July/12/2016

Filed Under: News, Videos Tagged With: charter schools, defrauding, Gulen, imam, texas, Turkish

Turkey detains 28 over alleged links to exiled cleric Gulen

June 25, 2016 By administrator

A Turkish anti-riot police officer stands guard in front of the headquarters of Turkish daily newspaper Zaman in Istanbul on March 5, 2016. © AFP

A Turkish anti-riot police officer stands guard in front of the headquarters of Turkish daily newspaper Zaman in Istanbul on March 5, 2016. © AFP

Turkey has reportedly arrested more than two dozen people for allegedly funding the movement of Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen whom the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan regards as an opponent.

Turkey’s Dogan news agency said on Saturday that some 28 people were detained during police raids across the country as part of a probe into their alleged links to Gulen, a cleric based in the United States.

It said that the investigation included the head of the Turkish Confederation of Businessmen and Industrialists (TUSKON), adding that the police were searching for 23 other people in Istanbul and southern provinces of Konya, Kayseri and Mugla.

Erdogan accuses Gulen of running a “parallel state” aimed at usurping him, while the judiciary has officially called the cleric the leader of Fethullahaci Terror Organization/Parallel State Structure (FeTO/PDY), which seeks to overthrow the legitimate Turkish authorities.

Gulen was once regarded as a major ally for Erdogan, but relations broke in 2013 when police and prosecutors seen as close to Gulen opened a corruption probe into the inner circle of Erdogan, who was then the prime minister.

Numerous police operations have been carried out since the summer of 2014 to round up allies of Gulen with thousands, including police officers, prosecutors and judges, sacked or reassigned over links to Gulen.

Additionally, several media outlets with ties to Gulen have been seized or shut down.

The opposition figure has been based in the United States since 1999, when he fled charges against him laid by the former secular authorities. Ankara’s request for the cleric’s extradition has been met with cold response from Washington.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Arrest, Gulen, Turkey

Why should Turkish cleric Fethullah Gülen operate charter schools on U.S. Military bases?

May 22, 2016 By administrator

gulen__fethulah_with_koranBy Robert R. Amsterdam,

(thehill.com)A secretive Islamic movement is trying to infiltrate the U.S. military by establishing and operating publicly-funded charter schools targeted toward children of American service personnel.

That charge may sound like a conspiracy theory from the lunatic fringe, but it is real and it is happening right now.  The most immediate threat is in Nevada, where Coral Academy of Science Las Vegas (CASLV) is currently negotiating with the United States Air Force to locate a charter school at Nellis Air Force Base, with classes starting this fall.  What is not widely known is that CASLV is part of a nationwide organization of charter schools and other businesses headed by Islamic cleric Fethullah Gülen, a reclusive but influential Imam living under self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania to avoid criminal prosecution in his native Turkey.

Our law firm has been engaged by the Republic of Turkey – a key NATO ally in a hotbed region – to conduct a wide-ranging investigation into the operations and geopolitical influence of the Gülen organization, which is behind the Coral Academy of Science and over 140 other public charter schools scattered across 26 American states.  Our investigation, still in its early stages, reveals that the Gülen organization uses charter schools and affiliated businesses in the U.S. to misappropriate and launder state and federal education dollars, which the organization then uses for its own benefit to develop political power in this country and globally.

Aside from defrauding American taxpayers, the Gülen organization has an even more ominous objective in the United States.  The organization is one of the country’s largest recipients of H1-B “specialty occupation” visas, which it uses to import Turkish teachers into its charter schools, supposedly because local U.S. talent is not available to fill math and science teaching positions in its charter schools.  The Gülen organization illegally threatens to revoke these visas unless the Turkish teachers agree to kick back part of their salary to the organization.

More importantly, the Turkish teachers in Gülen organization charter schools are evaluated not on the basis of their teaching skills, but rather on whether they achieve monthly goals in a secret point system designed to instil Turkish culture and Gülenist ideology in our American students. The goal, we are told, is to develop a Gülenist following of high achievers, incubated in our local community schools across the country.

The Gülen organization has been able to grow in the U.S. largely because it conceals both its identity and its motives.  The first line of defense for Gülenist charter schools and companies has been to deny any affiliation with Fethullah Gülen (their officers and directors claim that they are merely “inspired by” Gülen’s religious teachings), as if the simple creation of business entities in which Fethullah Gülen himself holds no ownership interest could alter his ultimate control over the organization.  In reality, the governing boards of the Gülen charter schools are populated disproportionately by loyal Turkish men answering to a handful of Imams who rule over defined regions across the U.S., reporting ultimately to Gülen in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania.  

In Nevada, CASLV is a three-campus school operating under a charter held by tax-exempt Coral Education Corp., headquartered in Reno.  Three of Coral’s board members are Turkish, one of whom was formerly the Principal at two other Gülen organization charter schools, the Sonoran Science Academy at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona and the Bay Area Technology School in California.

Unfortunately, Nellis Air Force Base is not the Gülen organization’s first stab at a U.S. military base.  The organization successfully opened a school on Davis-Monthan AFB in 2009, and it tried but failed to gain access to Marine Corps Base Hawaii and Naval Station Great Lakes in Illinois.  In California, Magnolia Public Schools applied for a charter in Oceanside, where Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton is located, although it temporarily withdrew its application after our law firm pointed out Magnolia’s connection to the Gülen organization earlier this year.

Lest there be any doubt about the objectives in the United States, the strategy of subtly indoctrinating school children into the Gülen movement is a familiar one overseas, and there is great peril in allowing it to flourish in this country.  In his native Turkey, Gülen created a network of hundreds of schools that have produced – over the past three decades – a vast cadre of followers now prepared to perform his bidding from official positions in government, law enforcement, the judiciary and the media.  Although precise numbers are impossible to verify, some have estimated that he currently controls more than half of the entire Turkish police force. The Economist newspaper compared Gülen’s influence in Turkey to the Freemason infiltration of law enforcement and judicial elites in Europe during the last century. Numerous documented cases in Turkey involving planted evidence, tainted prosecutions and illegal incarceration of Gülen critics underscore that he is quite willing to abuse his power and influence.

The same game plan is playing out, at last count, in 101 countries on every habitable continent.  With an estimated six million followers globally and assets in the range of $20-$50 billion, the Gülen organization has managed to conceal a great deal about its doctrine, mission or objectives.  Whether Gülen’s followers are classified as a religious sect, a commercial enterprise, a political movement or – as Dutch legislators concluded – a cult, it should be a matter of significant concern for our security and regulatory authorities.

In light of Gülen’s modus operandi elsewhere, the Department of Homeland Security should be asking itself why such a non-transparent, religion-based organization would seek to establish itself on our military bases, teaching the children of our service men and women.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: charter, cleric, Fethullah, Gulen, Schools, Turkish

Horizon Parents Truth: Turkic Alliance FBI raided Gulen Concept Schools

May 9, 2016 By administrator

DISCLAIMER:If you find some videos are disabled this is a result of Gulen Censorship and filing of fake copyright infringements to Utube.

DISCLAIMER:If you find some videos are disabled this is a result of Gulen Censorship and filing of fake copyright infringements to Utube.

 

Horizon Science Academy, this blog is not by the Gulen Movement as the blog Horizon Parents is. We are ex- teachers, parents of ex – students and concerned citizens of Horizon Science Academy. There are 122 US Gulen Charter schools run by foreign nationals who are replacing GOOD American teachers with fake h1-b Visas. The Gulen Movement is without a doubt behind these schools. Lets share our stories about the Concept Schools.

Turkic Alliance FBI raided Gulen Concept Schools and Rahm Emanuel’s Soiree Friend’s Find FBI Probe – 93

 

 

Source: http://horizonparentstruth.blogspot.ca/2016/03/turkic-alliance-fbi-raided-gulen.html?spref=tw

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Concept, Gulen, Horizon, Parents, raided, Schools, Turkic Alliance FBI

How Turkish Imam taking over US public charter schools, Magnolia Science Academy – A Gulen Charter School

May 8, 2016 By administrator

GulenMexico2The Gulen Movement is fantastic at advertising, PR, and bestwowing fake honors on their students, politicians, local media and academia. The Parents4Magnolia blog is NOT American parents it is members of the Gulen Movement in damage control mode. Magnolia Science Academy, Pacific Technology School and Bay Area Technology is the name of their California schools. They are under several Gulen NGOs: Pacifica Institute, Willow Education, Magnolia Educaiton Foundation, Accord Institute, Bay Area Cultural Connection. Hizmet aka Gulen Movement will shamelessly act like satisifed American parents or students. They will lie, cajole, manipulate, bribe, blackmail, threaten, intimidate to get their way which is to expand the Gulen charter schools. If this doesn’t work they play victim and cry “islamophobia”. Beware of the Gulen propagandists and Gulen owned media outlets. DISCLAIMER: if you find some videos are disabled this is the work of the Gulen censorship which has filed fake copyright infringement complaints to Utube

Read more: http://magnoliascienceacademy.blogspot.ca

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: charter, charter schools, Gulen, school

Turkey detains 101 for alleged links to cleric Gulen

April 18, 2016 By administrator

1151cdecc-f6ec-4699-96bc-1791a716209eTurkey has detained scores of people for their alleged link to Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen whom the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan regards as an opponent.

Police said on Monday that 101 people have been detained so far in an ongoing operation in nine provinces, which has primarily been focused on Istanbul, Anadolu News Agency reported.

Prosecutors have issued arrest warrants for 140 people under investigation centering on financial support for Gulen’s group.

Ankara has accused the cleric of heading a criminal group, what it calls the Fethullahist Terror Organization/Parallel State Structure (FeTO/PDY).

Gulen fled to the United States in 1999 after former secular authorities laid charges against him. Turkey has asked the US to extradite him but Washington has shown little interest in doing so.

Erdogan claims Gulen has built a network of supporters in Turkey’s police, media and judiciary and is conspiring to oust his government. Gulen denies the allegations.

As part of a crackdown on Gulen’s followers, police forces launched a raid on opposition media outlets linked to the cleric late last year.

Officers also arrested hundreds of people, believed to be sympathizers of Gulen, many of whom members of the police and the judiciary. Most recently, police shut down Zaman newspaper over ties with the cleric.

Erdogan’s government has been under fire for clamping down on journalists and sentencing them to long prison terms. Dozens of journalists are currently imprisoned in the country.

Erdogan and Gulen were allies until police and prosecutors, seen as sympathetic to the latter, opened a corruption investigation into Erdogan’s inner circle in 2013.

The investigation led to the resignation of the ministers of economy, interior, and urbanization. Gulen is also viewed to be behind the leaks that led to the probe.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: arrested, Gulen, Turkey

Turkey shuts down media businesses linked to Gulen

March 1, 2016 By administrator

Employees block the door as riot police try to enter Kanalturk and Bugun TV building in Istanbul, Turkey, October 28, 2015. ©Reuters

Employees block the door as riot police try to enter Kanalturk and Bugun TV building in Istanbul, Turkey, October 28, 2015. ©Reuters

Authorities in Turkey have closed media outlets linked to Fethullah Gulen, a US-based cleric and arch-foe of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, as Ankara continues its crackdown on dissent.

Last October, the state seized Koza Ipek Holding, a conglomerate connected to Gulen, as well as its media businesses, including the newspaper Bugun and television station Kanalturk, on accusation of financial irregularities.

Now, a stock exchange filing released late on Monday says operations were stopped due to “constant losses and the depletion of capital, while (the firms’) corporate entities will be retained.”

Gulen is regarded an outspoken opponent of Erdogan and his policies. The Turkish president has accused Gulen and his followers of plotting to overthrow the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), a charge that Gulen denies.

The preacher is wanted for purportedly running a “parallel” structure within Turkey’s state institutions.

A move by police and prosecutors considered sympathetic to Gulen to open a graft probe into Erdogan’s inner circle in 2013 prompted the Turkish government to launch a crackdown on Gulen’s commercial interests. Erdogan has also purged police and judiciary.

According to Erhan Basyurt, Bugun‘s former editor-in-chief until the state takeover, the media business had a valuation of USD 200 million in 2015, and the new management had shown investments, including acquisitions, as losses.

Turkish top judge stands up to Erdogan

In a separate development on Tuesday, Zuhtu Arslan, the president of Turkey’s Constitutional Court, defended his court’s independence after Erdogan and the justice minister slammed a ruling that the detention of two well-known journalists had violated their rights.

Erdogan said on Sunday he neither recognized nor respected the February 25 ruling by the tribunal that led to the release of Can Dundar, editor-in-chief of the opposition Cumhuriyet daily, and its Ankara bureau chief, Erdem Gul.

The opposition Cumhuriyet daily’s editor-in-chief Can Dundar (right at podium) and Cumhuriyet daily’s Ankara bureau chief Erdem Gul (left at podium) talk to the press and employees after being released from jail on February 26, 2016 at the Cumhuriyet headquarters in Istanbul. ©AFP

The two journalists have been under arrest since late November 2015 on charges of treason, espionage, and terrorist propaganda.

In late May 2015, Cumhuriyet posted on its website footage showing trucks belonging to Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization (MIT) allegedly carrying weapons for Takfiri groups in neighboring Syria.

Ankara denied the allegations, saying the trucks had been carrying humanitarian aid to Syria.

“Decisions taken by the constitutional court using its authority, are binding for everyone and every institution,” Arslan told a legal conference in Ankara, adding, “We are doing our job. We do not look at who is making the application. We are not on anybody’s side or against anyone.”

Ankara has been accused of supporting militant groups fighting to topple the Syrian government since March 2011.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gulen, media, Turkey

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