UPDATE - Turkish minister says Gulen no longer 'useful' to US
Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag says Turkish people will not allow foreign forces to decide country's future
UPDATES WITH QUOTES ON TORTURE ALLEGATIONS, FETO STRUCTURE
ANKARA (AA) – Turkey's justice minister has said Fetullah Gulen is no longer "a useful tool" for the U.S.
Answering journalists’ questions at Anadolu Agency's Editors' Desk in Ankara on Tuesday, Bekir Bozdag said Gulen's direction of the July 15 coup plot was a "fact known by all".
Speaking two days after five million people in Istanbul attended a huge cross-party, pro-democracy rally, Bozdag said:
"If you ask what the message of Aug. 7 and July 15 is, it is a declaration to both friends and enemies that henceforth coups cannot be staged in Turkey,” Bozdag added the Turkish people “would never allow it”.
"Our nation said it would settle its freedom and future," the minister said.
Bozdag went on to say that tools which act with foreign forces behind them cannot "seal the fate" of Turkey or decide the country’s future.
The justice minister also said the U.S. authorities' message so far about extraditing Pennsylvania-based Gulen had been "positive".
"They discuss extraditing Gulen and care about the demands of extradition. We consider this a positive development," Bozdag said. "The U.S. must facilitate the unconditional extradition of Fetullah Gulen to Turkey."
Bozdag added that he believes the U.S. will do what is necessary and return Gulen to Turkey.
-Torture allegations-
Bozdag rejected allegations of ill-treatment reportedly meted out to some coup suspects while in custody:
"It is a great distortion of events to display acts during the conflict as if they were made during the custody period," Bozdag said. "The files are clear. Turkey is a country which acts within the understanding of zero-tolerance of torture."
Bozdag reiterated that although Turkey temporarily suspended the European Convention on Human Rights [ECHR] for the duration of a three-month state of emergency the country had not compromised on its obligation to prevent torture.
The justice minister said stories and commentaries about the torture issue are made "deliberatively to shadow Turkey's righteous battle".
"International institutions' claims on torture are subjective allegations. This parallel structure's lobbying is powerful in Europe and in the U.S. These institutions publish reports on Turkey without asking any Turkish official or without gathering any actual information about Turkey."
-‘Unethical FETO’
Bozdag also questioned the functioning of the Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO), asking: "Why would a legitimate organization give aliases to its members?"
"If there is transparency in where you go, then everything is good in there," Bozdag said. "But they immediately give you an alias ... Without a doubt, that place is illegitimate, unethical and unlawful."
"They called themselves the 'golden generation', but they tried to undermine a generation," Bozdag said. "They almost managed to undermine the state’s functioning as well."
Turkey's government has repeatedly said the coup attempt was organized by followers of Gulen, who has lived in self-imposed exile in the U.S. since 1999.
Gulen is accused of leading a long-running campaign to overthrow the state through the infiltration of Turkish institutions, particularly the military, police and judiciary, forming what is commonly known as the parallel state.
The July 15 coup attempt left 240 people martyred and nearly 2,200 injured.
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