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Turkish president Erdoğan wants editor jailed for espionage in video row | |
(1 day later) | |
Lawyers for the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, have accused a newspaper editor of espionage and want him jailed for life, the paper said, the latest salvo in a bitter dispute that has alarmed defenders of media freedom in Turkey. | |
In the countdown to a parliamentary election on 7 June, the Cumhuriyet newspaper infuriated Erdoğan by publishing video footage it said showed the MIT state intelligence agency helping to send weapons to Syria. | |
In an article posted on its website, Cumhuriyet – long critical of Erdoğan and of Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development party (AKP) – said its editor, Can Dündar, was now facing charges that included “crimes against the government” and “providing information concerning national security” over the video footage. | |
Cumhuriyet said Erdoğan’s lawyers had lodged a criminal complaint with the Istanbul prosecutor’s office. No one from Erdoğan’s office was immediately available to comment. | |
Speaking to the state broadcaster TRT on Saturday, Erdoğan said the journalist behind the publication of the video would “pay a high price” for his actions and vowed to take legal action. | |
Reuters reported on 21 May, citing a prosecutor and court testimony, that MIT helped deliver arms to parts of Syria under Islamist rebel control in late 2013 and early 2014. | |
The witness testimony contradicts Turkey’s denials that it sent arms to Syrian rebels and, by extension, contributed to the rise of Islamic State, now a major concern for the Nato member. | |
Syria and some of Turkey’s western allies say Turkey, in its haste to see President Bashar al-Assad toppled, let fighters and arms over the border, some of whom went on to join Isis which now controls swaths of Syria and Iraq. | |
Cumhuriyet said its video dated from 19 January, 2014 but did not say how it had obtained the footage. | |
Erdoğan has said the trucks stopped that day belonged to MIT and were carrying aid to Turkmens in Syria. | |
He has said prosecutors had no authority to search MIT vehicles and were part of what he calls a “parallel state” run by his ally-turned-foe Fethullah Gülen, a US-based Islamic cleric who Erdoğan says is bent on discrediting him and the Turkish government. | |
Dündar defended his paper’s actions on his Twitter account on Monday. | |
“We are journalists, not civil servants. Our duty is not to hide the dirty secrets of the state but to hold those accountable on behalf of the people,” he said. |