Turkey indicts third US Consulate worker in Istanbul on terrorism charges

Nazmi Mete Canturk security officer at US Consulate in Istanbul is accused of links with Fethullah Gulen


Reuters April 26, 2019
View of the US consulate in Istanbul, Turkey. PHOTO: AFP

ISTANBUL: Turkey has indicted a third US Consulate employee and his wife and
daughter on charges of membership of a terrorist group,
according to a copy of the indictment seen by Reuters, a move
likely to further strain ties between Ankara and Washington.

Nazmi Mete Canturk, a security officer at the US Consulate in Istanbul, and his wife and daughter are accused in the indictment of links to the network of Fethullah Gulen, the US based Muslim cleric blamed by Ankara for a failed 2016 coup.

A Turkish prosecutor is seeking jail sentences for all three on charges of membership of an armed terrorist organisation, according to the indictment, which was completed on March 8 but has not been made public.

It says Canturk was in contact with dozens of individuals
under investigation for being members of Gulen's network and
that "evidence has been obtained regarding the suspect's actions
in line with the instructions of the (terrorist) organisation".

Canturk, his wife and daughter are cited in the indictment
as denying the charges. A spokesman for the Istanbul prosecutor's office did not respond to request for comment. A lawyer for Canturk declined to comment. The US Consulate referred questions to Washington.

A State Department spokeswoman said Washington had seen no credible evidence that Canturk was involved in any illegal activities and that, in his 30-year career, he had had many contacts with Turkish government and security officials in the course of his work. She called for a timely, transparent, and fair resolution of his case. Canturk was questioned by Istanbul police in January 2018
and subsequently put under house arrest, according to the
indictment and a preliminary proceedings report seen by Reuters.

That report, dated March 22, said that his first hearing would
be held on June 25. Two other locally employed U.S. Consulate workers, also Turkish citizens, were arrested in 2017 on terrorism and
espionage charges. The detentions prompted Washington to suspend
non-immigrant visa applications from the country, triggering a
reciprocal move from Ankara which snowballed into one of the
worst crises between the two NATO allies.

A Turkish court ruled on March 28 that one of them, Metin
Topuz, a translator and fixer for the Drug Enforcement Agency
(DEA) at the US consulate in Istanbul, should remain in jail
until his trial resumes on May 15.

If convicted, Topuz could face a sentence of life in prison. The other, Hamza Ulucay, who worked as a translator at the US Consulate in the southern city of Adana, was sentenced to four-and-a-half years in prison on terrorism charges but was released in January, with travel restrictions, after almost two years in detention.

Topuz has denied charges of espionage and links to Gulen. Ulucay also denied any links to terrorist organisations during his trial. Earlier this month, two US senators introduced a bipartisan bill requiring the imposition of sanctions on Turkish officials responsible for the detentions of US citizens and local consulate staff.

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