Turkey says it won't extradite any suspects to U.S. until it gets Fethullah Gulen - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:47 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
World

Turkey says it won't extradite any suspects to U.S. until it gets Fethullah Gulen

Turkey will not extradite any suspects to the United States if Washington does not hand over the cleric Ankara blames for orchestrating a failed 2016 military coup, President Tayyip Erdogan said on Thursday.

In addition to Gulen issue, Turkey angered by embassy brawl arrests and banker's conviction

Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen is pictured at his residence in Saylorsburg, Pa., in 2013. A former ally of Turkey's president, he has been blamed for inciting the country's 2016 coup. (Selahattin Sevi/Zaman Daily via Cihan News Agency/Reuters)

Turkey will not extradite any suspects to the United States if Washington doesn't hand over the cleric Ankara blames for orchestrating a failed 2016 military coup, President Tayyip Erdogan said on Thursday.

Ankara accuses U.S.-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen of masterminding the putsch and has repeatedly asked Washington for his extradition. U.S. officials have said courts require sufficient evidence to extradite the elderly cleric, who has denied any involvement in the coup.

"We have given the United States 12 terrorists so far, but they have not given us back the one we want. They made up excuses from thin air," Erdogan told local administrators at a conference in his presidential palace in Ankara.

"If you're not giving him [Gulen] to us, then excuse us, but from now on whenever you ask us for another terrorist, as long as I am in office, you will not get them," he said.

Gulen, 76, lives in rural Pennsylvania. The influential Sunni Muslim cleric fled Turkey for the U.S. in 1999 and was subsequently granted permanent resident status.

Turkey is the biggest Muslim majority country in NATO and an important U.S. ally in the Middle East.

But Ankara and Washington have been at loggerheads over a wide range of issues in recent months, including a U.S. alliance with Kurdish fighters in Syria and the conviction of a Turkish bank executive in a U.S. sanctions-busting case that included testimony of corruption by senior Turkish officials.

On Wednesday, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said ties were harmed by Washington's failure to extradite Gulen and U.S. support for Syria's Kurdish YPG militia and its PYD political arm. He said relations could deteriorate further.

"The United States does not listen to us, but it listens to the PYD/YPG. Can there be such a strategic partnership?... Turkey is not a country that will be tripped up by the United States' inconsistent policies in the region," Erdogan said.

Last week, a U.S. jury convicted an executive of Turkey's majority state-owned Halkbank of evading U.S. sanctions on Iran, in a case which Erdogan has condemned as a "political coup attempt" and a joint effort by the CIA, FBI and Gulen's network to undermine Turkey.

In May of last year, as President Donald Trump and Erdogan met, a brawl erupted in Washington outside the Turkish ambassador's residence. Several were arrested, including 2 Canadians.

The two countries also suspended issuing visas for months last year over a dispute following the detention of two locally employed U.S. consulate workers in Turkey on suspicion of links to the failed 2016 coup.

With files from CBC News