Purges in Turkey following the 2016 Turkish coup attempt
Since 2016, the government of Turkey has conducted a series of purges, enabled by a state of emergency in reaction to the failed coup attempt in 15 July that year. The purges began with the arrest of Turkish Armed Forces personnel reportedly linked to the coup attempt but arrests were expanded to include other elements of the Turkish military, as well as civil servants and private citizens. These later actions reflected a power struggle between secularist and Islamist political elites in Turkey, affected people who were not active in nor aware of the coup, but who the government claimed were connected with the Gülen movement, an opposition group which the government blamed for the coup. Possession of books authored by Gülen was considered valid evidence of such a connection and cause for arrest.
2016–present purges in Turkey | |||
---|---|---|---|
Part of Turkish government–Gülen movement conflict | |||
Ankara Istanbul Purges in Turkey following the 2016 Turkish coup attempt (Turkey) | |||
Date | 16 July 2016 – ongoing (disputed) (7 years, 6 months, 3 weeks and 5 days) | ||
Location | |||
Status | Ongoing
| ||
Parties | |||
| |||
Lead figures | |||
Fethullah Gülen | |||
Units involved | |||
| |||
Casualties and losses | |||
|
Tens of thousands of public servants and soldiers were purged in the first week following the coup. For example, on 16 July 2016, just one day after the coup was foiled, 2,745 judges were dismissed and detained. This was followed by the dismissal, detention or suspension of over 100,000 officials, a figure that had increased to over 110,000 by early November 2016, over 125,000 after the 22 November decree, reaching at least 135,000 with the January decrees, about 160,000 after the suspensions and arrests decree of April 29 and 180,000 after a massive dismissal decree in July 2018. Collectively about 10% of Turkey's 2 million public employees were removed as a result of the purges. Purged citizens are prevented from working again for the government, which has led in many cases to destitution.
In the business sector, the government forcefully seized assets of over a thousand companies, worth between $11 and $50–60 billion, on the charge of being related to Gülen and the coup. Goods and services produced by such companies were subject to boycott by the public.
The purges also extend to the media, with television channels, newspapers and other media outlets that were seen as critical of the government being shut down, critical journalists being arrested and Wikipedia being blocked, from April 2017 to January 2020. Since early September 2016, the post-coup emergency state extended to purging Kurdish groups, including the dismissal of over 11,000 Kurdish teachers and dozens of elected mayors and arrest of the co-chairs of the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) for alleged links with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). In August 2018, the Turkish Parliament approved a new "anti-terror" law to replace the state of emergency.