Source: Yahoo News
Istanbul (AFP) - Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's ally-turned-rival Fethullah Gulen is
suing him in the wake of a deeply damaging corruption scandal, a
newspaper close to Gulen's movement reported Tuesday.
Gulen,
an Islamic preacher living in self-imposed exile in the United States,
is claiming 100,000 lira (32,700 euros, $44,200) in damages from Erdogan
for allegedly denigrating and insulting remarks, the Zaman daily said.
Erdogan,
59, Turkey's strongman premier since 2003, has blamed a "parallel"
state of Gulen's associates within the judiciary and police for a major
graft probe that opened in December implicating members of Erdogan's
inner circle and their families.
Erdogan
has sacked or reassigned hundreds of police and prosecutors, portraying
the allegations of shady dealings as part of a plot to weaken his
government ahead of local elections on March 30 and a presidential poll
in August.
The purges, coupled
with a heavy-handed police crackdown on protests last June, moves to
exert more control on the judiciary and mooted Internet legislation have
raised deep concern at home and abroad about mainly Muslim Turkey.
His organisation issued a statement last month saying the government "seems to be poisoned with power".
The Journalists and Writers Foundation, a group linked to Gulen, listed on Tuesday a string of recent "deeply worrying developments" that risk making Turkey "lose its character as a state governed by the rule of law".
These included limits on the freedom of expression, unlawful wiretaps, "purging" civil servants, pressure on the media, the use of "hate-centred language", accusations of "treason" and efforts to place the judiciary under government control, it said.
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