Report: Turkish police tortured suspect, threatened to rape wife in Ramadan

A Turkish man jailed over alleged links to the Gülen movement was reportedly tortured under custody while police threatened to rape his wife during the holy month of Ramadan.

According to OdaTV columnist Müyesser Yıldız on Sunday the man, reported to be from southeastern Turkey, was forced by the prosecutor to act as a witness against other suspects also accused of links to the Gülen movement.

During his testimony to the prosecutor, he reportedly admitted to ties to the movement and gave up the names of people in the city he knew to be affiliated with members of the movement.

“I pointed out the people who I know on the computer. Then they said: ‘Jailed coup plotters will be sentenced in any case. Mention their names in your testimony and you are free.’ They showed me their pictures and I said: ‘Yes, I know them.’ Even the suspects’ names had been added by them,” the man said during a court hearing last month.

In response to a question from the judge asking whether he was changing his testimony taken by the prosecutor, the man said: “Sir, I am a member of the movement. They detained me. Then they detained my wife and showed her to me from the next room. They took our children and put them into the care of the child protection agency. After days of torture, they said, ‘We will break our [Ramadan] fast with your wife.’ I asked what they wanted. They said: ‘In addition to what you have already said, we will show you pictures of some people, and you will say you know them. You will sign the testimony. We will first release your wife and then, if you repeat this testimony before the court, set you free.’ I was forced to sign it. I am about to go insane. I have been getting psychological treatment for some time now,” he said.

Yıldız said the hearing had to be repeated due to a problem with SEGBIS, a voice informatics system used to record court proceedings.

During the rescheduled hearing a week later, the man said he knew all the suspects charged in the case.

Yıldız said the man failed to answer detailed questions such as where the suspects were from and where they would meet up.

“Last but not least,” Yıldız said, “another suspect requested permission to speak from the judge and said the man had never mentioned his name and that he had nothing to do with him, a controversial statement followed by a strange question from the man: ‘Did I give your name, too?’”

Meanwhile, a police chief who clashed with a group of coup soldiers aiming to raid a hotel where Turkish autocratic President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was staying in a western Turkish holiday resort on the night of a failed coup attempt in July 2016 has been handed down a prison sentence of six years, three months over use of a mobile phone messaging application known as ByLock.

Turkish authorities believe that ByLock is a communication tool among the alleged followers of the Gülen movement. Tens of thousands of people, including civil servants, police officers, soldiers, businessmen and even housewives, have either been dismissed or arrested for using ByLock since the failed coup attempt on July 15, 2016.

The police chief, identified only by his initials M.O., was serving at the Marmaris Police Station in Muğla province on the night of the coup attempt.

Erdoğan was on a vacation with his family at a hotel in Marmaris on the day of the coup. A group of putschist soldiers raided the hotel where Erdoğan was staying in a bid to arrest him; however, Erdoğan and his family members had left the hotel before their arrival.

Police Chief M.O., who fought against the putschist soldiers on July 15 to protect Erdoğan, explained during his trial at the Muğla 2nd High Criminal Court how things unfolded that night.

“I was chief of the police station in Marmaris when the coup attempt took place that night. I am [even] a co-plaintiff in a trial where soldiers are charged with involvement in the coup. I was one of the first people who stood up to the putschists. They yelled at me saying, ‘Surrender’,” said M.O., adding that a police officer, Nedip Cengiz Eker, who was killed that night during the clash with the coup soldiers, died near him.

M.O. was handed down his sentence at the end of the trial on charges of membership in a terrorist organization.

In a similar development, Tayyib Sina Doğan, a police officer who was one of three crewmembers of a helicopter that carried Erdoğan and his family from their hotel to the airport during the coup attempt in July 2016 was arrested over alleged links to the Gülen movement in late 2017.

Doğan was fired from the police department on Nov. 22, 2016 on accusations that he had downloaded the ByLock app and was sent to Sincan Prison in Ankara on the same allegations on Nov. 20, 2017.

Barış Yurtseven, the pilot of the plane that brought President Erdoğan from Dalaman to İstanbul on the night of the failed military coup, was also fired from Turkish Airlines (THY) in February over alleged links to the Gülen movement.

The coup attempt on July 15, 2016 killed 249 people and wounded more than a thousand others. Immediately after the putsch, the AKP government along with President Erdoğan pinned the blame on the Gülen movement despite the lack of any evidence to that effect.

Fethullah Gülen, who inspired the movement, strongly denied having any role in the failed coup and called for an international investigation into it, but President Erdoğan — calling the coup attempt “a gift from God” — and the government initiated a widespread purge aimed at cleansing sympathizers of the movement from within state institutions, dehumanizing its popular figures and putting them in custody.

1,188 people were detained in the first two weeks of 2018 as part of witch hunt targeting Gülen movement.

A total of 62,895 people were detained in 2017 as part of investigations into the movement, according to Interior Ministry reports.

Turkish Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu on Jan. 5 said 48,305 people were jailed in 2017 alone over Gülen movement links.

Soylu said on Dec. 12 that 55,665 people have been jailed and 234,419 passports have been revoked as part of investigations into the movement since the failed coup.

Soylu on Nov. 16 had said eight holdings and 1,020 companies were seized as part of operations against the movement.

The Justice Ministry announced on July 13 that 169,013 people have been the subject of legal proceedings on coup charges since the failed coup.

Turkey has suspended or dismissed more than 150,000 judges, teachers, police and civil servants since July 15 through government decrees issued as part of an ongoing state of emergency declared after the coup attempt. (SCF with turkeypurge.com & turkishminute.com)

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