ISTANBUL: The trial started on Monday of 17 people, mostly journalists, accused of links to last year’s failed coup attempt in Turkey, amid heightened concerns for press freedoms.
The defendants include prominent journalist Nazli Ilicak, former newspaper chief editor Ahmet Altan and his brother Mehmet Altan, an economics professor and writer. They have been accused of having prior knowledge of the coup attempt — which has been blamed on US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen — and of supporting it.
The three, who were staunch government critics, face life in prison if found guilty of charges. They are accused of “attempting to remove the constitutional order” and “committing a crime on behalf of an armed terrorist group without being a member of it, Turkish Hurriyet Daily News reported.
Ilicak and the Altan brothers are among six jailed defendants. Ten other suspects, including Ekrem Dumanli, the former editor in chief of the Gulen-linked Zaman newspaper, are at large and being tried in absentia. Another defendant is free pending the verdict.
Reporters Without Borders, the media advocacy group, called for the immediate release of Ilicak and the Altan brothers, who have been in pre-trial detention since July and September.
“It is high time that the Turkish authorities ended their systematic criminalization of critics,” the group said. “The already worrying situation of its media has become critical under the state of emergency proclaimed after the 2016 coup attempt.”
Turkey has arrested some 50,000 people in a massive crackdown following the failed coup and dismissed tens of thousands of other people from government jobs. Around 150 media organizations have been closed down and more than 100 journalists have been jailed.
Gulen, who is in self-imposed exile in the US, has denied involvement in the coup attempt.
Prominent Turkish journalists on trial over failed coup
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