ISTANBUL — Turkey issued a ban on professional travel for all academics and opened top-to-bottom investigations into military courts Wednesday as security chiefs planned the next steps in sweeping crackdowns after last week’s failed coup.
Already, the purges and probes have touched tens of thousands of people — judges, civil servants, military, police and others — as Turkey’s leaders seek to root out opponents and perceived internal dissident.
The latest moves underscored the expanding reach of the fallout.
At least 262 military judges and prosecutors were suspended as part of a full-scale investigation by the Defense Ministry into all personnel in its judiciary, the private NTV broadcaster reported without giving additional details.
The travel restrictions on educators, reported the state broadcaster TRT, officially applied to work-related trips.But some professors and others in academic fields claim that their administrators interpret the order more rigid, saying they cannot leave the country for any reason. Several university professors also confirmed that their overseers told them to cancel vacations and other leave plans indefinitely.
It came a day after more than 15,000 education workers were suspended and resignations were demanded for all university deans.The government is presenting the measures as an effort to confront a wide-ranging conspiracy led by a U.S.-based Turkish cleric, and as a way of curbing the influence of the once-powerful military. Critics, however, claim that the government of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is using the coup attempt as an excuse to eliminate the last vestiges of opposition to its rule.
Fethullah Gulen, the cleric accused of inspiring the coup attempt, has denied any links to the plot, implying instead that Erdogan staged it as part of a bid to consolidate power. Gulen lives in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania and his backers operate education networks in Turkey, the United States and elsewhere.The press credentials of at least 34 Turkish journalists were also revoked because of alleged ties to Gulen’s movement, the Associated Press reported, citing Turkish media.
A senior Turkish official described the travel ban on academics as just a “temporary measure.”
“As you surely know, universities have always been crucial for military juntas in Turkey, and certain individuals are believed to be in contact with cells within military,” he said.
Many academics have been critical of Erdogan in the past.
The state telecommunications authority has also announced it has blocked access to WikiLeaks, the whistle-blowing website, after it announced therelease of nearly 300,000 emails from Erdogan’s party.
The site said it was releasing the emails, which could possibly contain material embarrassing to the government, earlier than planned “in response to the government’s post-coup purges,” though the latest of the emails dates to a week before the coup took place.
The government has also announced an “important decision” is expected Wednesday after a meeting of the national security leaders, raising expectations that more purges will follow.
More than 45,000 military officials, police officers, judges, governors and civil servants have also been fired, detained or suspended since a mutinous faction of Turkey’s military staged an attempted overthrow of the government Friday night, hijacking fighter jets and helicopters to strike key installations and security forces.
Mevlut Cavusoglu, Turkey’s minister of foreign affairs, said in an interview that the issue of civilian oversight of the military — a matter of long-standing debate within Turkish politics — would be addressed during Wednesday’s national security meetings. A government official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the announcement has yet to be made public, also said military reforms could be proposed.The military has long seen itself as the guardian of secularism in this mostly Muslim country and has staged a series of coups in past decades, but its power has been gradually diminished. Thousands of Turks took to the streets to prevent another coup, but the crackdown has raised fears that Erdogan — who described the plot as a “gift from God” — will use it as an opportunity to make the government more authoritarian.The government official said military reform would likely bring the army chief of staff under the Defense Ministry and give parliament more oversight of the military’s budget and ranks.
In order to change the constitution without a referendum, Erdogan’s party will need support from 367 members in Turkey’s 550-seat parliament, Cavusoglu said. It needs 330 votes to hold a referendum.
The United States and Europe have urged Turkey, a NATO member and ally, to follow the rule of law and maintain democratic principles amid the sweeping fallout from the coup attempt.