Turkish
police have raided media outlets linked to a US-based Muslim cleric and
detained at least 23 people, including journalists and television
producers, in a nationwide operation.
Though
a former ally, the cleric Fethullah Gulen has been in an open conflict
with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan since a graft investigation
targeting the president’s inner circle emerged a year ago.
The
offices of the country’s best-selling Zaman newspaper and Samanyolu
television were raided on Sunday, marking an escalation in Erdogan’s
battle with Gulen.
The
Anatolia news agency says a court issued a warrant to arrest 31 people
and that 23 of them were detained in raids in Istanbul and other cities
across Turkey on Sunday.
Among
those detained were Ekrem Dumanli, the editor-in-chief of Zaman, and
Hikmet Karaca, the head of Samanyolu TV, and senior police officers.
“History
will remember the good people who walked without looking back for a
more democratic Turkey,” Dumanli told reporters at the newsaper’s
headquarters in Istanbul, before his detention.
“This is not about [Gulen] movement-government rivalry. Please, we should protect our democracy,” he added.
Gulen, who lives in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania, denies the accusations.
Zaman and Samanyolu are affiliated with Gulen’s movement.
Dozens
of people gathered outside Zaman’s headquarters in Istanbul to protest
the detentions, shouting: “Free press cannot be silenced.” Turkey’s
journalism associations also denounced the raids targeting journalists.
It
was the latest in a wave of arrests targeting Gulen’s group. Several
police officers were arrested earlier this year for alleged illegal
wiretaps and other charges.
The government has said it wants Gulen extradited to Turkey from the United States.
--Punch News

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