Ankara, Turkey: Turkish authorities on Wednesday issued arrest warrants for 215 police officers, including 147 police chiefs, broadcaster NTV reported, in an operation linked to July's attempted coup.
Thirty from the group have been arrested so far, NTV said.
Turkey has seen two mass arrests in the police force since October 7, that the government says aims to root out supporters of US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, who Ankara blames for masterminding the abortive coup.
Gulen denies accusations he was behind the coup, during which more than 240 people were killed.
Some 32,000 people have been jailed, and 100,000 military officers, police, teachers, judges, prosecutors and others have been sacked.
On Wednesday, the Defence Ministry said the armed forces had dismissed 201 more personnel from its air force and 32 more from the navy.
Authorities said that all 215 officers listed were suspected of using ByLock, NTV said, a smartphone messaging app used by Gulen's followers since 2014. Most of the warrants were for officers in Ankara, though others were in 13 provinces, it said.
The state intelligence agency traced thousands of people they say are part of Gulen's movement and linked to last month's failed military coup by cracking ByLock's security features.
Parliament on Tuesday voted to prolong a state of emergency for three months in a vote that was more of a formality, as the ruling AK Party commands a large majority and the opposition Nationalist Movement Party had pledged its support of the move.
The main opposition People's Republican Party and third-biggest Peoples' Democratic Party opposed the extension, citing worries that innocent people were being targetted.
Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said Turkey's entire population had been harmed by supporters of Gulen, which the government refers to as the Gulenist Terror Organisation (FETO).
"There are no victims in FETO - only the 79 million people FETO victimised," he said on Wednesday.
Thirty from the group have been arrested so far, NTV said.
Turkey has seen two mass arrests in the police force since October 7, that the government says aims to root out supporters of US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, who Ankara blames for masterminding the abortive coup.
Some 32,000 people have been jailed, and 100,000 military officers, police, teachers, judges, prosecutors and others have been sacked.
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Authorities said that all 215 officers listed were suspected of using ByLock, NTV said, a smartphone messaging app used by Gulen's followers since 2014. Most of the warrants were for officers in Ankara, though others were in 13 provinces, it said.
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Parliament on Tuesday voted to prolong a state of emergency for three months in a vote that was more of a formality, as the ruling AK Party commands a large majority and the opposition Nationalist Movement Party had pledged its support of the move.
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Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus said Turkey's entire population had been harmed by supporters of Gulen, which the government refers to as the Gulenist Terror Organisation (FETO).
"There are no victims in FETO - only the 79 million people FETO victimised," he said on Wednesday.
© Thomson Reuters 2016
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