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Turkey has chance to end polarisation after coup: opposition chief
By Stuart WILLIAMS, Raziye AKKOC
Ankara (AFP) July 27, 2016


Turkish coup suspects in Greece win asylum case delay
Athens (AFP) July 27, 2016 - Eight Turkish military officers who fled the failed coup to Greece have been given more time to press their asylum claim, their lawyer said on Wednesday.

Vassilis Terzidis told AFP that the men "fear for their lives" if they are returned to Turkey, where the authorities have been waging a massive crackdown against suspects in the July 15 military coup bid.

"Given the very volatile situation in Turkey the eight soldiers wish to wait and better prepare (their case)," he said.

The eight men -- two commanders, four captains and two sergeants -- requested asylum in Greece after landing a military helicopter in the northern city of Alexandroupoli four days after the attempted government takeover.

Last Thursday, a Greek court sentenced the eight -- who face a military trial in their homeland if sent back -- to suspended two-month prison terms for illegal entry.

They will remain in police custody in Greece until their asylum applications are heard.

A first ruling had been expected in early August but now they have been summoned to a hearing on August 19, said Terzidis.

The eight claim they will not receive a fair trial in Turkey, where the authorities have detained thousands of people over the coup, including top generals.

Rights group Amnesty International has said it has "credible evidence" of the abuse and torture of people detained in sweeping post-coup arrests -- something Ankara has denied.

Terzidis also referred to the possibility of Turkey restoring the death penalty in the wake of the attempted coup.

"That will be another argument in their favour for the international protection they are requesting," he said.

The case threatens to strain ties between the uneasy NATO allies, with Ankara labelling the eight "terrorists".

The failed coup in Turkey offers a unique chance to end the dangerous levels of polarisation in the country, the main opposition leader told AFP Wednesday.

In an interview at the Republican People's Party (CHP) headquarters in Ankara, Kemal Kilicdaroglu also urged President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to uphold the rule of law during his post-coup purge.

The CHP leader held an unprecedented meeting two days ago with Erdogan at his presidential palace in a bid to forge national unity in the wake of the July 15 coup.

Turks of all political affiliations poured into the streets that night to oppose the renegade soldiers -- a rare show of harmony in a country that has at times seemed hopelessly divided.

"There is a real polarisation in Turkey and Turkey must be saved from this polarisation," Kilicdaroglu told AFP.

"I hope we all learn a lesson from these events, not least those in charge of the country," he added.

Kilicdaroglu's meeting on Monday with Erdogan -- which also included Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) leader Devlet Bahceli -- was a major turnaround for the CHP leader.

He had previously denounced the president as a "tinpot dictator" and refused to set foot in his "illegal palace".

"I will criticise Erdogan and I have not finished criticising Erdogan. I went there (the palace) for Turkey's normalisation, for it to be secure and to make sure coups do not happen again."

He said there was an "intent to have warmer relations" with Erdogan but this had to be translated into political rhetoric.

- 'Break this picture' -

The president is considering dropping slander lawsuits against opposition leaders as a sign of thanks for their conduct in the coup, an official said on Wednesday.

Ahead of the coup, divisions in Turkey had reached a new intensity, with political parties flinging insults at each other and the dominant personality of Erdogan splitting the country.

There has been an upsurge of violence in the southeast where the Kurds, Turkey's biggest ethnic minority, predominate.

Meanwhile Alevis -- who adhere to an offshoot of Shia Islam and are the biggest religious minority in the mainly Sunni country -- have complained of being sidelined.

"In Turkish politics, because there is an axis towards religion and ethnicity, there is polarisation," said Kilicdaroglu.

"We have to break this picture."

The CHP was founded in 1923 by Turkey's first post-Ottoman leader Mustafa Kemal Ataturk and sees itself as the guardian of the secular and pro-Western foundations on which he set up the modern Turkish Republic.

But since Erdogan's Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) came to power in 2002, the CHP has found itself thrashed at the ballot box.

Kilicdaroglu stabilised what was a dangerously sinking ship mired by scandal when he took over in 2010. But in the last elections in November 2015, the party gained less than 25 percent of the vote.

The CHP chief, who spoke to thousands Sunday at an anti-coup rally in Istanbul organised by his party but backed by the AKP, said there now had to be a "new era" of Turkish politics.

"Democracy, rule of law and secularism must be accepted," he told AFP. "There must be a politics of understanding... a different kind of politics."

- 'Don't be like putschists' -

He warned the authorities to act within the rule of law in a post-coup crackdown that has so far seen more than 15,000 detained.

"Having a coup was one mistake. But a country that believes in the rule of law will fight for the rule of law also for the putschists," he said.

"To arrest journalists, to detain people, to throw them into jail and say 'it is not important', to fill the prisons with thousands of people is not right.

"If we behave in the same way as they behaved, if we treat them badly, then there is no difference between us and the putschists."


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Previous Report
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Media targeted in Turkey's post-coup crackdown
Istanbul (AFP) July 26, 2016
Turkish media played a crucial role in averting the coup against President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, yet dozens of journalists are now being targeted in the sweeping crackdown after the failed putsch. Since July 15, reporters have been arrested or suspended, accused of conspiring against Erdogan, while authorities have raided newspapers and scrapped TV licences over links to the man they blame f ... read more


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