Turkey has detained 1,098 people over the last week as a large-scale purge still continues in the country since last year's botched military coup.
According to a statement released by the Ministry of Interior on Monday, during the course of last week, Turkish authorities arrested 831 people for their suspected ties to the Gulen movement, which is banned by Ankara and labeled as the Fethullah Terrorist Organization (FETO).
The US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen is blamed by Ankara for purportedly masterminding and orchestrating 2016 failed putsch against the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Seventy-six-year-old Gulen denies any involvement.
More than 50,000 people have so far been jailed and over 150,000 including judges, teachers, police and other state servants have been dismissed or suspended in the controversial purge, which is strongly condemned by local and international rights groups.
The statement added another 213 of those were suspected of links to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).
A shaky ceasefire between the PKK, which has been calling for an autonomous Kurdish region since 1984, and the Turkish government collapsed in July 2015. Since then, Turkish ground and air forces have been carrying out operations against the PKK positions in the country's troubled southeastern border region as well as northern Iraq and Syria, claiming to have killed thousands of militants, although rights campaigners and pro-Kurdish political parties say civilians have been killed in the operations, too.
The PKK, in return, has mounted its reprisal attacks on Turkish security forces. More than 40,000 people have been killed in the conflict over the past few decades.
The statement further read that another 46 people had been arrested over purported links to the Takfiri ISIS terrorist group, which is mainly active in Syria and Iraq, while eight more were nabbed for suspected ties to "leftist terrorist groups."
Earlier this month, the government extended the state of emergency for a fourth time in the Anatolian country, almost a year after it was imposed in the wake of the botched mid-July military putsch. Each emergency rule lasts for three months. Ankara claims that the purge is necessary to confront security challenges facing Turkey and to curb supporters of Gulen. The European governments have in multiple occasions voiced alarm at the scale of the crackdown.
LINK: https://www.ansarpress.com/english/7759
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