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Turkey revokes passport of exiled Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen | |
(3 months later) | |
The Turkish government has cancelled the passport of ally-turned-foe Fethullah Gulen, local media reported on Tuesday, the latest salvo in a bitter feud between the US-based Muslim cleric and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. | |
Erdogan and his ruling AK party accuse Gulen and his supporters of seeking to establish a “parallel state” in Turkey and of orchestrating a corruption investigation in 2013 which briefly threatened to engulf the government. | |
Gulen, who denies the accusations, stepped up his own criticism of Erdogan, saying he was leading Turkey “towards totalitarianism”. | |
CNN Turk said on its website that Turkey had informed US officials on 28 January that it was revoking Gulen’s passport because it was issued based on a “false statement”. Gulen has lived in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania since 1999. | |
A Turkish foreign ministry official said he could not confirm the media reports. | |
The move could bring Ankara a step closer to issuing a formal extradition request for Gulen. Washington is expected to reject such a demand, further fraying bilateral ties already strained over regional policy and US concerns over what some see as Erdogan’s increasing authoritarianism. | |
Erdogan has already called for Gulen to be deported. In December a court issued an arrest warrant for the cleric, who had been a close ally of Erdogan’s Islamist-rooted party for many years after it came to power in 2002. | |
Related: Turkish police caught in middle of war between Erdoğan and former ally Gülen | |
After the graft allegations emerged in 2013, however, Erdogan, then prime minister, purged Turkey’s state apparatus, reassigning thousands of police and hundreds of judges and prosecutors deemed loyal to Gulen. | |
Turkish authorities have also conducted raids against media organisations seen as close to Gulen, triggering criticism from rights groups and the European Union, which Turkey still aspires to join. | |
Hidayet Karaca, head of the Samanyolu broadcaster who has been jailed since December, said on Tuesday the case against Gulen and senior media executives was politically motivated. | |
“The police raids and arrests have become part of a strategy by the AKP government to silence the free press. It’s no longer possible to discuss judicial independence in Turkey,” Karaca said in a written response to questions from Reuters submitted through his lawyers. | |
In an op-ed published on Tuesday in the New York Times entitled “Turkey’s Eroding Democracy”, Gulen accused Erdogan – who remains popular in Turkey – of using his electoral successes to ignore the constitution and suppress dissent. | |
“By viewing every critical voice as an enemy – or worse, a traitor – they are leading the country toward totalitarianism,” he wrote. |
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