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Turkey: Istanbul court orders arrest of US-based preacher Gulen

November 9, 2015 By administrator

thumbs_b_c_5550e6868d2bc717f54675d47998b550The court has also ordered the arrest of former police officer Uslu in connection with an on going ‘parallel state’ probe

ISTANBUL

A court in Istanbul ordered the arrests in absentia of U.S.-based preacher Fetullah Gulen and ex-police officer Emre Uslu in connection with a “parallel state” probe.

Gulen, who is self-exiled in the U.S, has been accused of leading a “terrorist organization” and plotting to overthrow the elected Turkish government.

The network led by Gulen is accused of wiretapping senior Turkish government figures, including the prime minister, National Intelligence Organization (MIT) chief, Cabinet ministers as well as journalists through serving state officials.

The Istanbul court decided that the first trial of the case would be held early February next year and also issued red notices for both suspects.

The indictment against Gulen and Uslu is 10,529-pages long. A total of 55 out of 122 suspects in the probe have been arrested.

This is not the first time that a Turkish court has issued arrest warrants for Gulen and Uslu.

On Oct. 19, Istanbul’s High Penal Court issued an arrest warrant for Gulen and his aide Sinan Dursun for “attempting to stage a coup, establishing and masterminding an armed organization and political espionage” in Turkey.

On Feb. 24, a Turkish criminal court in Istanbul issued an arrest warrant for Gulen and Uslu, again related to the “parallel state” probe.

The “parallel state” or “parallel structure” refers to a purported group of Turkish bureaucrats and senior officials embedded in the country’s institutions, including the judiciary and police, who are allegedly trying to undermine the elected government.

The ongoing operation against this network has resulted in the detention of dozens of police officers and the reassignment of hundreds of other officers across Turkey.

Source: aa.com.tr

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Arrest, Court, Gulen, İstanbul

Turkey opposition leader Gulen faces subversion charge

October 19, 2015 By administrator

GulenA court in Turkey has accepted an indictment against opposition leader in exile Fethullah Gulen for attempting to overthrow the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

According to the indictment seen on Monday, Gulen is accused of “forming and leading a terrorist group” and “obtaining secret information for the aim of political espionage”.

Gulen and 68 other people are also accused of being behind the country’s corruption investigations in 2013 that undermined Erdogan’s allies. They are charged with “seeking to overthrow the government or obstruct its activities by force.” They potentially face life sentences.

The 1,453-page indictment was prepared by Istanbul’s Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office. It said Ankara could not fulfill its potential due to “ugly interventions, plots, terror and crises” created by “our Western ‘friends'” and allies in Turkey.

The court also issued a new arrest warrant for Gulen and his assistants. Earlier on October 2, another arrest warrant was issued for the preacher for “conspiracy, forgery of official documents and slander.”

Erdogan has accused Gulen and his followers of plotting to overthrow the ruling AKP party, a charge Gulen denies. Hundreds of people, believed to be sympathizers of Gulen, many of them members of the police and the judiciary, have been arrested as the government intensifies crackdown ahead of the November 1 snap elections in which the AKP seeks to restore its majority in the parliament.

On October 8, a state prosecutor in the capital, Ankara, issued an order to ban service provider Digiturk from broadcasting two major news networks, namely the Bugun TV and S Haber, along with a children’s channel and four other general stations as they were allegedly close to Gulen.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: faces, Gulen, subversion, Turkey

Turkey: Erdogan’s nemesis formally returned to court

September 19, 2015 By administrator

Turkish justice has formally returned to court the sworn enemy of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the imam Fethullah Gülen, claiming against him to 34 years in prison for terrorism, reported the pro-government news agency Anatolia.

The preacher, who lives in the US, is being prosecuted for “constitution of a criminal armed gang”, forgery and defamation by terrorism prosecutor of Istanbul, who also asked her incarceration, said Anatolia. Turkish justice had from December 2014 issued an arrest warrant against Mr. Gülen but the US has refused to extradite him.

Long time ally of the Islamic-conservative regime in power since 2002 in Turkey, the imam is accused Erdogan of trying to overthrow the piloting an extensive anti-corruption investigation launched in late 2013 against the current president and his family. The preacher, who runs a large network of schools, businesses and NGOs called Hizmet (“service” in Turkish), has always denied the allegations, denouncing a “witch hunt.”

In addition to Mr. Gülen himself, the Istanbul’s prosecutors also returned to court the owner of the TV channel Samanyolu, five former senior members of the police and 26 other people. All suspected of being close to the Gülen nebula, face up to 26 years in prison.

For nearly two years, the head of state has made many purges against followers of Hizmet, particularly in the police and justice or thousands of officials were transferred, dismissed or even imprisoned. His government has also launched numerous legal proceedings against what he calls a “parallel state”.

Earlier this month, police launched an operation against a holding close to the Gülen nebula, the Ipek media group. Wednesday, she also questioned the CEO of the industrial group Boydak, Boydak Memduh, which was released Thursday, reported the Doğan news agency.

Saturday, September 19, 2015,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Court, Gulen, nenesis, Turkey

Espionage trial involving Turks in Germany reveals alleged money transfers

September 18, 2015 By administrator

Muhammed Taha Gergerlioğlu sits in front of the regional appeal court in Koblenz, Germany on Sept. 9. (Photo: Reuters)

Muhammed Taha Gergerlioğlu sits in front of the regional appeal court in Koblenz, Germany on Sept. 9. (Photo: Reuters)

Three suspects of Turkish origin have been charged with espionage in an indictment prepared by the German attorney-general that includes wiretapped phone conversations revealing transfers of huge sums of money and claims of Germany being the true enemy of Turkey.

In the third hearing of the suspects’ trial, provincial Police Chief Steffan Blasius testified that a suspect and former aide of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Muhammed Taha Gergerlioğlu, 59, frequently communicated with German national Göksel Güler, also a suspect in the case, and many others, some of whom remain unidentified.

Blasius said the police prepared 3,300 pages of transcripts from more than 20,000 wiretapped phone and Internet communications. Police only mentioned the headings of the transcripts in court, without going into detail. Blasius read headings such as “Ismail al-Buti, 500 million USD,” “Swiss Bank, power of attorney, 500 million USD” and “To be given to RTE [Erdoğan]” in the Koblenz High Court.

Last year, the leader of the Turkish main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, claimed Erdoğan has eight Swiss bank accounts. He called on the president to prove otherwise, but Erdoğan has never responded.

During the trial of the suspects, the third of whom is Turkish national Ahmet Duran Y. and all of whom were arrested in Germany in December on suspicion of espionage, the court rejected the defense’s attempt to have the indictment thrown out because of ongoing cooperation over terrorism between the two countries.

In May, the attorney-general filed charges against the trio, accusing them of spying on behalf of Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization (MİT).

Blasius stated that Güler had acted as a sort of personal secretary for Gergerlioğlu, organizing his itinerary and picking him up from the airport when he came to Germany. He said the two originally spoke over the phone, but later switched to written communication, often using messaging software, including Skype, Viber, Tango and WhatsApp.

Among the headings of transcribed messages were “Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will reach [out to] 7 billion people and bring justice to the world” and “Arab media launched a campaign against TR [Turkey], all except Al Jazeera.”

‘Germany real enemy of Turkey’

A message Gergerlioğlu sent to an unidentified person on Aug. 18, 2014, stated, “Germans are our real enemies,” “These [Germans] are true enemies of Islam” and “Germans did not take it well that THY [Turkish Airlines] outperformed Lufthansa.”

Blasius said many messages included comments about Fethullah Gülen, who lives in self-imposed exile in the US and who has inspired a civil society movement in his name. One message even noted that the Israeli ambassador had attended an event organized by the Gülen movement.

Gülen, who is internationally acclaimed for his promotion of interfaith dialogue, tolerance and education, served as a spiritual leader and imam before moving to the US in 1999. He became a target of Erdoğan and the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government following the eruption of a graft scandal that implicated Erdoğan’s inner circle in late 2013.

Erdoğan has accused the Gülen movement of operating a “parallel structure” of supporters in the judiciary and the police force who initiated the graft probes, while the movement denies the charge.

Turkish spies are said to have been ordered to spy on Erdoğan’s opponents in Germany, including members of the Kurdish minority, the faith-based Gülen movement and other Turkish nationals critical of the Turkish leadership.

According to court documents, the three were charged with tracking and spying on Turkish and Kurdish dissidents who would be detained upon returning to Turkey. Blasius said police had recovered many photographs from the communications, including some of demonstrations by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in Bielefeld and Mannheim.

The suspects allegedly profiled Alevi groups in particular. One message was titled “Regarding a PKK and Alevi rally in Koln: German intelligence is supporting atheist Alevis and secular Kurds against Turkey with lots of money. They are swimming in a pool of money. German anarchists are supporting this rally as well.”

Gergerlioğlu also organized a social group, called the “New İstanbul Civilization (YİM),” on WhatsApp, with more than 50 participants, who exchanged information and photos. In his messages, Gergerlioğlu talked about setting up a wide intelligence network, stressing that all information exchanged within the group would be assessed by MİT. He said: “MİT infiltrated the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant [ISIL]. Foreign intelligence exposed that. The PKK is arming. Don’t worry; they will use it against ISIL.”

Gergerlioğlu was reportedly sent by MİT head Hakan Fidan with a fund of 25,000 euros to launch a consulting firm for German-Turkish companies in the city of Bad Dürkheim with Güler in 2011.

The indictment states that the suspects were engaged in acts of espionage for MİT. Ahmet Duran Y. and Güler were charged with collecting information about dissidents opposing Erdoğan in Germany under the leadership of Gergerlioğlu. They face a prison sentence of up to five years, according to German law.

The second witness to testify on Thursday was Police Chief Martin Müller of the Mainz Criminal Bureau. He said he examined the iPhone seized from Gergerlioğlu and found more than 300 documents in the phone’s memory. Among them were passport photographs belonging to British, Syrian, Iranian and Kazakhstani citizens, a list of names from various groups, including al-Qaeda, documents of arms trades between Israel and İstanbul, as well as various official letters and notifications addressed to and from Turkish prosecutors’ offices, governors, and members of the police force and gendarmerie.

Source: ZAMAN

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, espionage, Germany, Gulen, MIT, money transfer, Muhammed Taha Gergerlioğlu, Turkey, Turks

Turkey police search Gulen-linked media group

September 1, 2015 By administrator

e81bbbc8-32ef-465a-bffc-61caab3dccedTurkish police have staged a major swoop on the offices of an anti-government media group linked to US-based opposition figure Fethullah Gulen.

Turkey’s police searched 23 media offices and Ipek University in Ankara, which all belong to Koza Ipek Holding company, “as part of a terrorist investigation into Fethullah Gulen,” the state-run Anatolia news agency reported.

The media group owns several newspapers and two television channels, including the Turkish dailies Bugun and Millet, the television channels stations Bugun TV and Kanalturk and the website BGNNews.com.

Gulen’s Hizmet (Service) movement was an important supporter of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) when it came to power in 2002. The alliance, however, broke up a decade later, after Gulen was accused of using his influence in the country to topple the government.

Meantime, opposition journalists complain that the move is part of a major government squeeze on all opposition media.

The media crackdown comes as the government, which is fighting a major offensive against Kurdish militants in the southeast, prepares for snap elections on November 1.

The ruling AKP was hopeful of winning the June 7 elections and form a single-party government. However, the AKP plan failed and no party managed to win the minimum number of parliamentary seats required for single-party government.

Talks then got underway on forming a coalition government with the country’s four major parties in parliament.

After coalition talks failed as well, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan approved the formation of an interim government that will run the country until snap elections in November.

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

The master of false-Flag operation Davutoglu Accuse Armenian Diaspora work with Gulen movements

February 12, 2015 By administrator

Davutoglu, are you NATO member or ISIS?

Davutoglu, are you NATO member or ISIS?

 Armenian diaspora in US denies Davutoglu fabricated claims on cooperation with Gülen Movement.  Fact it was him davutoglu when he was FM said we opened embassies all over the world to serve Gulen movement.

Read Claire Berlinskiour Article our two thugs Erdogan and Fethullah Gülen

Edvin Minassian, who is among the executives of the US-based Armenian Bar Association, told the weekly that the fact that the many members of the Armenian diaspora in the US work for the closure of charter schools run by Turkish people affiliated with the movement is a clear sign that the two groups are at odds with each other.

The director of the US-based Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), Aram Hamparian, was also quoted by Agos as saying that members of the movement in the US openly and actively works against the policies of Armenian community in the US. He argued that members of the movement supports efforts by the Turkish government to “prevent a just and truth-based solution to the Armenian genocide issue” and siding with Baku in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. 

Harut Sassounian, the publisher of The California Courier, an English-Language Armenian weekly based in Glendale, California, also termed Davutoğlu’s statements that members of the Gülen movement support the Armenian community in the US as “one of lies of Davutoğlu and President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Davutoglu, false flag, Gulen, master, operation, the

Turkey Gülen’s passport has been canceled, Turkey tells US

February 3, 2015 By administrator

n_77819_1Ankara has informed U.S. officials that the Turkish passport of Fethullah Gülen, a Pennsylvania-based Islamic scholar accused of building a “parallel structure” within the Turkish state seeking to topple to the government, has been canceled.

The move comes as Turkey seeks to ramp up pressure on the U.S. to deport Gülen.

Gülen received his passport upon a “false statement,” so it was cancelled on Jan. 28, state-run Anadolu Agency reported on Feb. 3. The report speculated that this could lead to Gülen’s deportation if a similar false statement was used in his application for a U.S. Green Card, quoting Michelle Estlund, an American lawyer specializing on Red Bulletin issues, as well as Turkish lawyers.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has repeatedly said that he wants the U.S. to deport Gülen, referring to coup and spying allegations against suspected sympathizers of his movement.

“I think his deportation, rather than his return to Turkey, would be appreciate,” Erdoğan said in an interview broadcast on Jan. 30, calling on Washington to fulfil a task for its “strategic partner” Turkey.

The Gülen movement is accused of being behind Turkey’s largest ever corruption probe that shook the country in December 2013, including allegations against Erdoğan’s family members and a number of former ministers.

The case was subsequently quashed by courts and a parliamentary commission.

February/03/2015

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: canceled, Gulen, Passport, Turkey

Gülenists in Turkey cooperating with Israel’s Mossad, Erdoğan says

January 31, 2015 By administrator

ISTANBUL

mossad-erdogan-gulenTurkish President Recep Tayyip Erodoğan said Jan. 31 that the Gülenists in the country, which he dubs “the parallel structure,” have joined forces with the Israeli intelligence service. 

“The sincere people backing this parallel structure should see with whom this structure is cooperating with,” Erdoğan said, while addressing a meeting of the All Industrialist and Businessmen’s Association (TÜMSİAD) in Istanbul.

“Shame on them if they still cannot see that this structure is cooperating with the Mossad,” he said.

Erdoğan accuses the followers of the U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen for illegal wiretappings and a “coup attempt,” starting from the revelation of a large corruption investigation in December 2013.

The Gülenists did not let the other religious organizations and associations live, Erdoğan said.

Turkey’s relations are tense with Israel since nine Turks and one Turkish-American were killed and several other pro-Palestinian activists were wounded when Israeli commandos stormed the ship Mavi Marmara on May 31, 2010, bound for Gaza.

“They are not national, they are not local;” Erdoğan said for Gülenists. “The ones who are still accompanying them despite all these will face a big shame soon. We were hurt by [Gülenists] and don’t want others to be hurt. I address to those who think they are hiding at political parties, NGOs and associations right near us. They have no excuse in still remaining under that umbrella despite all this scum.”

‘Are you anarchist?’
The president also harshly criticized two former prosecutors in the country’s largest graft probe case that started in December 2013, which is closed both at the regular courts and a parliamentary inspection commission, without giving names.

“A newspaper, which has published the cartoons that insults our prophet, was insulting a prosecutor five years ago,” Erdoğan said.

The president was apparently referring to daily Cumhuriyet, whose two columnists published the small black-and-white images of the Charlie Hebdo cover printed by the French mag after the Paris attacks, and former prosecutor Celal Kara, who was one of the initiators of the graft probe.

“Now you see the same newspaper embracing that prosecutor. And that prosecutor is telling about how they materialized the Dec. 17 coup attempt,” Erdoğan said.

“This is openly a confession of the coup attempt,” he said.

Another graft probe prosecutor, Muammer Akkaş was also a targeted by the president. Criticizing Akkaş for distributing leaflets and making a press statement in front of a court house late in 2013, “Are you an anarchist, How can you distribute leaflets in front of the court house,” Erdoğan asked, still not giving a name.

The president said Jan. 29 in a televised interview that it would be apprapriate if the U.S. deports Gülen.

January/31/2015

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Erdogan, Gulen, Israel, mossad, Turkey

Turkey’s Two Thugs, by Claire Berlinski

December 23, 2014 By administrator

Ordogan and golen at warErdoğan and Gülen are both dangerous—but only one of them lives in the Poconos, pennsylvania.

Until recently, I lived in Turkey. It seemed to me then unfathomable that most Americans did not recognize the name Fethullah Gülen. Even those vaguely aware of him did not find it perplexing that a Turkish preacher, billionaire, and head of a multinational media and business empire—a man of immense power in Turkey and sinister repute—had set up shop in Pennsylvania and become a big player in the American charter school scene. Now that I’ve been out of Turkey a while, I’ve realized how normal it is that Americans are indifferent to Gülen. America is full of rich, powerful, and sinister weirdoes. What’s one more?

It’s normal, too, that Americans view news from Turkey as less important than other stories in the headlines. After all, Turks aren’t doing anything quite so attention-grabbing as hacking Sony, destabilizing the postwar European order, or rampaging through the Middle East as they behead, rape, crucify, and enslave everything in their path. Thus, the reader who has noticed the news from Turkey might believe the story goes something like this: President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the authoritarian thug running Turkey, has been rounding up journalists who bravely exposed his corruption.

That American readers now understand that Erdoğan is a corrupt authoritarian is an improvement. (They may vaguely recall that not long ago, he was viewed by the large parts of the Western intelligentsia—and by the very same news organs reporting the latest developments—as a liberal-minded reformer.) But this is actually a story about two thugs. The details may be hard to follow, but the devil is in the details. The journalists recently arrested by Erdoğan are loyal to Gülen, who has made himself quite cozy in the United States. The phrase commonly used to describe this state of affairs—“self-imposed exile”—should not leave the reader nodding pleasantly. It should leave him wondering, “What does that mean? Why have we offered him exile?”

In failing to stress the double-thugged nature of this situation, American officials have unwisely conveyed to the world that we prefer Gülen to Erdoğan. So does the commentary oozing from think tanks, journalists, soi-disant experts, and European luminaries. We’d be better-advised at least to pretend to be against all corrupt authoritarians. We might even be wise to suggest, if only by means of a hint, that yes, we do understand that this has been a long decade of Turkish crackdowns, many inspired and executed by Gülen’s thugs. We might even indicate—in some subtle way—that while authoritarian crackdowns are not to our taste, there is at least some dark and cosmic justice in the world when the authors of crackdowns get a smackdown of their own.

It is certainly possible that we give the impression that we prefer Gülen to Erdoğan because we do indeed prefer him. But readers should be reminded (or informed, if they were not aware) that Gülen is the one in the United States, where he is accruing power daily, and Erdoğan is at least separated from us by an ocean. It would seem Gülen now has enough power that when his boys get locked up, the West squeaks, whereas we didn’t so much as raise an eyebrow when anyone else’s boys were rounded up, and haven’t much bothered to do so at any similar moment in the past decade. We may prefer Gülen because he is smarter and vastly more subtle than Erdoğan. But if only for this reason, he may well be the more dangerous of the two. It seems all-too-plausible that many Americans don’t even realize he’s here, much less that he is a thug.

I hope that our policy makers, at least, are fully aware that Gülen is no noble figure. Perhaps they are of the belief that he’s a thug, but at least he’s our thug. Gülen seems to think that we may be the thugs, but that we are his thugs. He is behaving accordingly, directing campaign contributions to politicians in the districts where his schools operate. We consistently fail to acknowledge his outsize role in the transformation of Turkey from modest authoritarian state to megalomaniacal authoritarian madhouse. That we also tolerate his presence on our soil prompts many Turks to draw what seems a reasonable conclusion: The U.S. doesn’t give a damn about Turkish democracy. Or Turkish journalists. We just prefer Gülen to Erdoğan.

I hope this isn’t the case, but it’s consistent with the evidence. Also consistent is another disturbing hypothesis: We still have no idea who Gülen is, and truly believe Erdoğan—head of our NATO ally—is locking up modest martyrs whose only crime was to expose his corruption. The corruption is real, the lockup is real, and, yes, Turkey is our NATO ally. But Erdoğan hasn’t been rounding up journalists of no special distinction (or none, at least, beyond their principled stance against corruption). He has been rounding up Gülen-allied journalists, who are not so much epic heroes in the battle against Turkish corruption and for Turkish press freedom as they are operatives for the Turkish president’s existential rival.

Turkey does have epic heroes. One of them is named Ahmet Şık. The people now being locked up only very recently had him locked up, because he wrote a book suggesting that Gülen’s thugs were precisely the kinds of people who might practice corruption and lock up journalists. Şık is a better man than I, so to speak, for he found it in his heart to respond to the latest news with these words: “The former owners of the period of fascism we experienced a few years ago today are experiencing fascism. To oppose fascism is a virtue.” My first reaction was different: “Lock them up and throw away the key.” It took me several minutes to remember that I am an American and thus opposed to fascism, too. As all right-thinking people should be.

There are many victims of human rights outrages in Turkey. And yes, it is proper for us to insist that the Our Boy’s Thugs receive due process. They will not get it, but it is right to insist. But if vainly insist we must, the fate of these 35 football fans is a less ambiguous cause. And the fate of these Syrian kids a greater priority.

Turkey has requested that we extradite Gülen. What should we do about that? Americans must be baffled, given what they’ve been told. Common sense might say, “Of course we would extradite a corrupt authoritarian to our trusted NATO ally.” If that fails to happen, it might suggest that one—or many—of our inbuilt assumptions is wrong. We may believe that we control Gülen. But what if it’s the reverse? It would come as a nasty surprise to some, but not to anyone who has watched him at work in Turkey. If asked for my advice, I would say: “Be on the safe side. Extradite him promptly.” After all, if Turkey is indeed our close friend and trusted NATO ally, sending him back would be a gesture of trust and friendship. It would be proof as well that while we may not be reputed for subtlety, we are more than capable of it when called for. It would be classier, too, than some of the cruder practices we have recently used in our efforts to defuse ticking time bombs.

Then again, we could keep him. But be aware that the people who told you Erdoğan was a liberal democrat would seem to have exhibited rather bad judgment. And the people who warned you otherwise are telling you now that Gülen is a thug. So keep that in mind. Handle with care.

Claire Berlinski, a City Journal contributing editor, is an American journalist who lives in Paris. 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Erdogan, Gulen, Poconos, thugs, Turkey, USA

Turkish court issues arrest warrant for US-based cleric Fethullah Gülen

December 19, 2014 By administrator

Toygun Atilla ISTANBUL

n_75831_1A Turkish court has issued an arrest warrant for U.S.-based Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, a former ally turned arch-enemy of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. Report hurriyet daily news

The Prosecutor’s Office in Istanbul described Gülen in a Dec. 18 request to the 1st Criminal Court of Peace as, “The leader of a criminal organization publicly known as the ‘Hizmet Movement,’ which was structured in media, economy and bureaucracy in violation of laws and regulations.”

Prosecutor Hasan Yılmaz requested the arrest warrant by stressing that “enough concrete evidence showing that Gülen committed a crime was collected during the investigation” into the activity of his community.

The request noted that Gülen has been abroad since 1998 and the prosecution was not able to contact him for the investigation, Anadolu Agency reported.

According to the request that the court accepted Dec. 19, Gülen is accused by the prosecution on three counts: 1) Forming and managing a terrorist organization, which carries a 10-15 years prison sentence. 2) Causing a victim to be unrightfully prosecuted due to slander, which carries 3-7 years of prison sentence. 3) Depriving a person from his/her freedom through force, threat and fraud, which carries a 2-7 years prison sentence.

Earlier, TRT Haber, the state-run television news station, had rescinded a story in which it claimed an Istanbul court issued an arrest warrant for Gülen.

In police raids on Dec. 14, Samanyolu Media Group head Hidayet Karaca was arrested, along with daily Zaman Editor-in-Chief Ekrem Dumanlı. Dumanlı, however, was released by the court on Dec. 19. Both the Samanyolu channel and the Zaman newspaper are linked to Gülen.

Erdoğan has repeatedly accused Gülen, whose followers are thought to hold influential positions within the police and judiciary, of conducting the graft investigation in December 2013 as part of a “coup attempt” to overthrow the government.

December/19/2014

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Court, Gulen, Turkey, warrant

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