A Turkish court on Saturday placed under arrest three former top
diplomats, including an advisor to ex-president Abdullah Gul, over links
to the failed July 15 coup, state media said.
An Ankara court
remanded Gurcan Balik, Ali Findik and Tuncay Babali in custody ahead of
trial over suspected links to the US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen who
is accused of masterminding the coup, the state-run Anadolu news agency
said.
Balik is a prominent figure who was the chief foreign policy
advisor to Gul, who served as president from 2007 to 2014 before
handing over to Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
He had also worked as an advisor to former prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu during his long stint as foreign minister.
In that role, Balik in 2013 set up a hugely controversal meeting between Davutoglu and Gulen while the then foreign minister was attending the UN General Assembly in New York, Anadolu said.
In that role, Balik in 2013 set up a hugely controversal meeting between Davutoglu and Gulen while the then foreign minister was attending the UN General Assembly in New York, Anadolu said.
Davutoglu
in May 2015 confirmed he had secretly visited Gulen for talks at his
Pennsylvania compound aimed at persuading him to return to Turkey to
ease tensions in the bureaucracy.
He has insisted both Gul and Erdogan, then prime minister, were aware of the visit.
Babali meanwhile had served as ambassador to Canada while Findik had been ambassador to Costa Rica.
Turkey
has embarked on an all-out purge of state institutions in the wake of
the coup to rid the country of what Erdogan calls the “virus” of Gulen’s
influence.
The arrest of Balik is significant as it represents
one of the first times a figure linked to the political leadership in
the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) has been implicated in
the coup.
There has never been any suggestion of wrongdoing on the
part of Gul and Davutoglu and both condemned the coup in the strongest
possible terms.
According to Anadolu, the foreign ministry fired
88 people in the wake of the coup. Almost 70,000 civil servants have
been dismissed in total, over half of them in the education sector.

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