Reports: Erdogan among Thousands Targeted in Phone-Tapping
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةTurkish police have eavesdropped on thousands of people including Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, as well as cabinet ministers, the country's spy chief and journalists, local newspapers reported on Monday.
Associates of U.S.-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen in the police and the judiciary have tapped the phones of Erdogan as well as politicians and businessmen for three years, pro-government dailies Yenisafak and Star claimed.
"This a sad and shocking event. The public is following this closely," said government spokesman Bulent Arinc.
Erdogan has accused rivals in the influential Gulen group of acting as a "state within a state" seeking to topple his government by instigating a high-level corruption investigation against close allies.
Classified documents revealing the surveillance were discovered by new prosecutors appointed after a mass purge of the police and prosecution service in the wake of the corruption probe launched in December, the press reports said.
When pressed on the allegations by local press, one of the former prosecutors denied that anything illegal had taken place.
"These allegations are entirely without foundation. Not a single illegal operation was authorised," Adnan Cimen told newspaper Milliyet.
The Star reported that so-called Gulenists had wiretapped more than 7,000 people, as well as the headquarters of the opposition Republic People's Party (RPP), since 2011 on the pretext of trying to uncover terrorism plots.
Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said that he had been wiretapped, adding: "This is no longer a problem just for the (ruling) AK Party."
Intelligence chief Hakan Fidan and one of his close allies were also among those targeted, along with many business people, activists and journalists, according to the newspaper reports.
Faruk Logoglu, a vice-president of the RPP who was reportedly one of those targeted, dismissed the claims as an attempt by Erdogan to "support his rhetoric about a parallel state that he uses against the Gulen movement".
The corruption scandal has thrown up one of the most serious challenges to Erdogan's 11 years in power ahead of key local elections in March.
The mass eavesdropping reports come as parliament began debating a new bill aimed at giving the intelligence agency a free hand in carrying out undercover missions and surveillance at home and abroad -- without the need for a court order.
Erdogan has come under fire for what critics see as increasingly authoritarian policies, including curbs on the judiciary and the Internet.