Turkey Court Arrests TV Chief on 'Terror' Charges
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةA Turkish court on Friday remanded in custody the head of a national TV network and three ex-police officers on terrorism charges, in a case linked with a top foe of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan that has strained EU ties.
Turkey's state-run TRT television and the Sabah daily said the court has also issued an arrest warrant for Fethullah Gulen, a U.S.-based Turkish cleric who Erdogan now regards as his top enemy. However this was not officially confirmed.
Samanyolu TV chief Hidayet Karaca was placed under arrest on charges of forming a terrorist group, after being detained with over two dozen others in weekend raids on journalists, scriptwriters and police accused of plotting to overthrow Erdogan.
The court however ordered the release of Ekrem Dumanli, the editor-in-chief of the Zaman daily which has repeatedly accused Erdogan of running a corrupt regime and who was arrested in the same raids last Sunday.
Both the Zaman newspaper and the STV channel are linked to Gulen, a one-time ally of Erdogan whom the Turkish strongman has now vowed to crush without mercy.
Dumanli defiantly told hundreds of supporters outside the court after this release that "the press cannot be silenced, media will never succumb to intimidations."
Seven other suspects in the case were ordered released by the court in Istanbul while three more -- all ex-police officers -- were also remanded in custody.
Erdogan accuses Gulen of running a "parallel state" and being behind sensational corruption allegations against his inner circle that broke on December 17 last year.
Gulen, who is believed to have millions of followers in Turkey and runs private crammer schools around the world, has vehemently denied all the allegations against him.
State-run TRT television and the website of the pro-government Sabah newspaper said that an arrest warrant had also been issued for Gulen "for leading a terrorist organization".
There was no immediate confirmation of this from the court and the story later disappeared from the website of TRT with no explanation. However it remained on the website of Sabah.
The United States has so far paid little attention to repeated requests from Turkey for Gulen's extradition from his secluded compound in the state of Pennsylvania.
Turkish television said that Karaca had been charged with "forming and running a terrorist organization".
The three former senior Istanbul police officers arrested -- Tufan Erguder, Ertan Ercikti and Mustafa Kilcaslan -- had been charged with "membership of a terrorist organization".
Dumanli has been slapped with an exit ban from Turkey, indicating he is still set to face trial. It was not immediately clear what charges he might face.
According to Zaman's website, Karaca raised his hands after the decision was announced and said: "No need to be worried, God helps."
"Just as this is an arrest order for a fictional scenario, this is a fictional ruling.
"Those who made this decision will appear before the court one day," he said.
His arrest is believed to be linked to a popular drama series on STV, "Tek Turkiye" (One Turkey), which tells the story of a doctor who goes to work in the Kurdish-majority southeast amid the armed rebellion by Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) rebels.
The European Union had condemned the arrests as running contrary to European values but Erdogan has struck back, telling the bloc to "mind their own business" in a row that risks badly damaging relations.
The arrests have also amplified concerns about media freedoms in Turkey under Erdogan, who has dominated the country for 12 years and in August moved from the post of prime minister to president.
Dumanli denounced the arrests as a "theater show" and said that the authorities were seeking to cover up "their scandals, sins and corruption."
"They detained us, but we told them that we are not afraid of being detained, being imprisoned or being hanged -- for us, it is no different from attending a wedding ceremony."