ANKARA (Reuters) – A Turkish court has ruled that journalist Mehmet Altan be released, four months after he was sentenced to life imprisonment on charges of aiding a failed military coup, a member of his defense team said on Wednesday.
Altan and his brother, Ahmet, were first detained in September 2016 as part of a government crackdown in the aftermath of a coup attempt against President Tayyip Erdogan. They were then jailed for life in February along with four other journalists on charges of aiding coup plotters.
“It was an absurd situation and totally unlawful for him not to be released after the Constitutional Court decision,” a lawyer for Altan, who declined to be named, told Reuters.
“Another court, the appeals court, did the right thing and released him now. That’s what should have happened in the first place,” the lawyer said.
Altan’s case underscored deep concern about press freedom in Turkey as well as worries over the independence of the judiciary under Erdogan, who was re-elected on Sunday to a newly empowered executive presidency.
Since the coup attempt, more than 50,000 people have been jailed and more than 150,000 sacked or suspended from their jobs. More than 120 journalists have been detained and over 180 media outlets closed on suspicion of links to the network of a U.S.-based cleric, blamed for organizing the abortive attempt to topple the government.
Source: Reuters