Establishing
a special court to try suspects accused of plotting the failed July 15 coup
attempt is not a necessity, Turkey’s justice minister has said, adding the
trials will take place at civilian courts in the Sincan district of the capital
Ankara.
“At this
point, a special court is not needed. It is known which courts will try those
who plotted a coup because a level of specialization has been achieved [among
Turkish courts],” Justice Minister Bekir Bozdağ said on July 22, during an
interview with private broadcaster CNN Türk. The minister added they could
consider not assigning additional duties to these courts in order to assist
with their heavy workload.
A large
courtroom will be needed to try hundreds of suspects and the trials will take
place in the Sincan district of the capital Ankara, Bozdağ added.
“There is
no way that legal cases with so many defendants can be heard at courthouses in
Ankara. A space [is needed] for the defendants, their lawyers, observers and
the relatives [of the accused]. It is obvious that we need a big space,” he
said.
“As the
[Justice] Ministry, we have taken the necessary measures and are continuing our
efforts. The trial will be held within the boundaries of the Sincan district,”
the minister stated.
Admitting
that there were widespread fears the post-coup process could lead to a “witch
hunt,” Bozdağ stressed that the judicial process would prevent innocent people
from being punished.
“Anyone
might have this fear. I have it too. Currently there may be information about
some people, some may testify to police and others may be detained, but this
process has just begun. The guilty will be separated from the innocent by the
end of the decision-making process,” he said.
According
to the latest figures reported by the state-run Anadolu Agency on July 22, more
than 44,000 employees of state institutions have been suspended from their
duties amid a nationwide probe into the coup attempt.
Some
44,530 employees of state institutions and organizations have been suspended from
their duties over alleged links to the failed coup and U.S.-based Islamic
scholar Fethullah Gülen, who is accused of orchestrating the attempt.
The
Education Ministry announced that 21,738 civil servants working at the ministry
had been suspended from their duties, 21,029 of whom were teachers, while the
Defense Ministry said 262 military judges and prosecutors had been suspended
from their duties.
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