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Turkey Sledgehammer trial: Key coup sentences upheld | Turkey Sledgehammer trial: Key coup sentences upheld |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A Turkish court has upheld the convictions of key military officers ruled to have plotted the overthrow of PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government. | A Turkish court has upheld the convictions of key military officers ruled to have plotted the overthrow of PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government. |
A retired general accused of being the coup plot organiser, Cetin Dogan, had his 20-year prison sentence upheld. | A retired general accused of being the coup plot organiser, Cetin Dogan, had his 20-year prison sentence upheld. |
More than 300 people were jailed last year over the "Sledgehammer" plot against the Islamist-rooted government. | |
The appeals court also ruled that more than 100 defendants should be acquitted or face a retrial. | |
The investigations into Sledgehammer, and a separate alleged coup plot known as Ergenekon, are the most prominent cases that have been pursued against military officials by Mr Erdogan's government, which has its roots in political Islam. | |
'Preparing a coup' | |
At last year's trial near Istanbul, prosecutors said Operation Sledgehammer was a conspiracy created in 2003 whose aim was to trigger a coup against the elected government of Mr Erdogan. | |
Military officers were accused of plotting to bomb mosques and trying to trigger a war with Greece. | Military officers were accused of plotting to bomb mosques and trying to trigger a war with Greece. |
The prosecution argued that the officers aimed to provoke widespread civil unrest in order to justify a military intervention. | The prosecution argued that the officers aimed to provoke widespread civil unrest in order to justify a military intervention. |
The Supreme Court of Appeals in Ankara has now decided to uphold the convictions of 237 retired officers. | The Supreme Court of Appeals in Ankara has now decided to uphold the convictions of 237 retired officers. |
The most prominent defendants - former army commander Cetin Dogan, former navy chief Ozden Ornek and former air force chief Ibrahim Firtina - had their 20-year sentences for plotting a coup confirmed. | |
'Witch hunt' | |
Thirty-six retired military officers were acquitted by the Appeals Court. | |
Eighty-eight other defendants will have their cases re-assessed by lower courts, to see if they face a retrial or have no case to answer. | |
The defendants had argued that the evidence against them was fabricated, describing the two-year trial as "unfair and unlawful". | |
They also accused the government of carrying out a witch hunt against the armed forces. | |
The decision to uphold the majority of the convictions is a further sign that the Turkish military has lost its once-overwhelming political power, says the BBC's James Reynolds in Istanbul. | |
For decades, the armed forces were the ultimate arbiter in Turkish politics. | |
Between 1960 and 1997, the military forced out four civilian governments. | |
But over the last decade, Mr Erdogan's government has changed the balance of power in Turkey, says our correspondent. |