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Gulen calls for international commission to probe coup charges

Turkish president urges world leaders to act against what he calls Fethullah Gulen's 'terrorist network'
Fethullah Gulen says he will accept findings if international probe shows his involvement in the 15 July coup bid in Turkey(Reuters)
By Reuters

US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen called for an international commission to investigate Turkey's charge that he orchestrated a failed coup last July, and said he would accept the findings if such a body found evidence of his guilt.

Gulen, who has lived in self-imposed exile in the US state of Pennsylvania since 1999, told the German broadcaster ZDF in an interview broadcast on Friday that there was no evidence linking him to the thwarted putsch, which he has denounced.

He accused Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of using the coup to silence opponents.

Turkey has dismissed or suspended more than 100,000 people in the military, civil service, police, judiciary and education system since a group of rogue soldiers tried to topple the government.

"An international organisation should examine the issue. If the charges are correct, I will gladly accept what they want. But they haven't proven anything or responded to my suggestions. It's all just pure conjecture," Gulen told ZDF.

"If they can prove that I spoke personally or by telephone with those responsible for the attempted coup, I would be happy to bear the consequences," he said.

Erdogan on Tuesday called on world leaders at the UN to take measures against what he called Gulen's "terrorist network," which he said threatened their security.

Turkish authorities have accused Gulen of building up over decades a network of followers inside the armed forces and civil service that attempted to take control of the government.

They have asked the US to extradite or detain the cleric, who was once a close ally of Erdogan's.

US Vice President Joe Biden last month told Erdogan during a visit to Ankara that Washington was cooperating with the extradition request but needed evidence to meet US legal standards.

Gulen told ZDF that, if Washington approved the extradition request, he would comply.

"If the US says 'Yes', then I will go. Then I will spend the rest of my numbered days being tormented by them so that I can free myself even more from my sins and mistakes and reach God as a pure man," he said.

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