- President insists he remains in charge
- Around 160 dead, 2,840 military arrested
- Coup attempt ‘may destabilise region’
ISTANBUL — Turkey’s
government rounded up thousands of military personnel on Saturday said
to have taken part in an attempted coup, moving swiftly to re-establish
control after a night of chaos and intrigue that left hundreds dead.
By
noon, there were few signs that those who had taken part in the coup
attempt were still able to challenge the government, and many declared
the uprising a failure.
Prime
Minister Binali Yildirim called the insurrection “a stain in the
history of democracy” at a news conference on Saturday in Ankara, the
capital. He raised the death toll in the clashes to 265, with 1,440
people wounded, and he said that 2,839 military personnel had been
detained.
As the insurrection unfolded Friday night, beginning with the seizure of two bridges in Istanbul by military forces, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
was not heard from for hours. He finally addressed the nation from an
undisclosed location, speaking on his cellphone’s FaceTime app — a
dramatic scene that seemed to suggest a man on the grip of losing power.
But in the early hours of Saturday morning, he landed in Istanbul, a
strong sign that the coup was failing.
Mr. Erdogan placed blame for the intrigue on the followers of Fethullah Gulen,
a Muslim cleric living in exile in Pennsylvania, who was the
president’s ally until a bitter falling out three years ago. Mr. Gulen’s
followers were known to have a strong presence in Turkey’s police and
judiciary, but less so in the military.
Speaking
Saturday morning, Mr. Erdogan said, referring to Mr. Gulen: “I have a
message for Pennsylvania: You have engaged in enough treason against
this nation. If you dare, come back to your country.”
The cleric denied in an emailed statement that he had been involved in the coup attempt.
Mr.
Erdogan also said that Turkish fighter jets had bombed tanks on the
streets of Ankara, and that a military helicopter being used by the coup
plotters had been shot down.
There
was also a battle early Saturday morning at Turkey’s main intelligence
headquarters in Ankara, which was later secured by government forces,
and a Turkish official said the intelligence chief, Hakan Fidan, had
been taken to a secure location.
In
a news conference on Saturday, Turkey’s top military officer, Gen. Umit
Dundar, the acting head of the General Staff, said that “the coup
attempt was rejected by the chain of command immediately.”
“The
people have taken to the streets and voiced their support for
democracy,” he said, adding that “the nation will never forget this
betrayal.”
Turkish soldiers secured Taksim Square in Istanbul early Saturday as supporters of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan protested. |
As
Turkey began waking up after a long and in many ways surreal evening,
it appeared that the elected government had re-established control. But
many questions remained unanswered, including who exactly was behind the
plot and what the longer-term fallout would be to the political system
of Turkey, a NATO ally and important partner to the United States in the
fight against the Islamic State.
Much
of the violence overnight was in Ankara, where different branches of
the security forces fought one another over control of government
buildings, including the Parliament building, where several explosions
were reported.
The
state-run Anadolu Agency reported that 1,563 soldiers had been
arrested. Television footage showed some soldiers, naked from the waist
up, being put on a bus in Istanbul.
Early Saturday morning, soldiers surrendered
on a bridge that traverses the Bosporus, one of two that the military
shut down as the coup attempt began Friday evening. Footage showed
abandoned military clothing and helmets along the bridge. The government
also moved on a military school in Istanbul, arresting dozens.
Turkey
has a long history of military involvement in politics — there have
been three coups since 1960 — and as the country became deeply polarized
in recent years between supporters of Mr. Erdogan’s Islamist government
and those loyal to Turkey’s secular traditions, many wondered if the
military would intervene. Some, quietly, had even hoped they would.
But
once it came, people in the country, even those bitterly opposed to Mr.
Erdogan, seemed to have no desire for a return to military rule. Turks
across the political spectrum, including the main opposition parties
that represent secular Turks, nationalists and Kurds, opposed the coup.
So did many top generals in the armed forces, highlighting that the
attempt appeared not to have had deep support, even in the military.
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