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DEMOCRACY
Turkey abolishes special military tribunals
by Staff Writers
Ankara (AFP) Feb 21, 2014


Turkey's parliament passed a law Friday abolishing specially appointed courts that have convicted hundreds of military officers for coup plotting.

The conciliatory move toward the military, proposed by the Islamic-rooted ruling party, comes as Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is grappling with a high-level corruption scandal that has implicated his entourage and dragged down some of his ministers.

The bill, which President Abdullah Gul is expected to sign, would abolish the specially appointed courts that in 2012 convicted more than 300 active and retired military officers in the so-called "Sledgehammer" trial, and pass their case files to Turkey's regular criminal courts.

The measure could clear the way for convicted military officers to be retried, an option Erdogan said last month he would not oppose.

The original trials in the special courts were criticised for the defendants' long detention periods, and the military top brass complained some of the evidence was fabricated.

Turkey's army, which considers itself the self-appointed guardian of the secular regime, has staged three coups since 1960, and forced out an Islamist government in 1997.

The bill appears to be an attempt by Erdogan to reach out to the country's once-mighty generals, after spending his 11 years in power clipping their wings.

Erdogan's government has been ensnared in a corruption scandal he blames on a former ally, US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen. The strongman premier has responded by sacking or reassigning thousands of police and prosecutors to cut Gulen's influence.

The scandal has grown into a major crisis for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) ahead of March local elections.

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