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News > World

Turkey's New Interior Minister Blamed the US for the Coup

  • People wave national flags as they wait for President Tayyip Erdogan to arrive at the United Solidarity and Brotherhood rally in Gaziantep, Turkey, Aug. 28, 2016.

    People wave national flags as they wait for President Tayyip Erdogan to arrive at the United Solidarity and Brotherhood rally in Gaziantep, Turkey, Aug. 28, 2016. | Photo: Reuters

Published 31 August 2016
Opinion

The outgoing interior minister was criticized for intelligence failures following a series of attacks by the Islamic State group and Kurdish militants.

Turkish Interior Minister Efkan Ala has resigned, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said Wednesday, following a string of bombings that prompted public criticism and concerns about intelligence failures before last month's failed coup, with the position filled by Labor Minister Suleyman Soylu, who made headlines last month for saying the United States was behind the failed July coup.

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Turkey has faced a series of attacks blamed on the Islamic State group and Kurdish militants, and President Tayyip Erdogan told Reuters in July that there had been clear intelligence failures in preventing last month's failed coup attempt.

Soylu said a day after the coup bid that it was clear "America is behind it," though Erdogan's spokesman later said he had spoken "in the heat of the moment."

The prime minister did not give a reason for the resignation in his brief statement broadcast on Turkish television channels. A senior official told Reuters that some of the appointments Ala had made while in post had raised concerns, as well as "his inability to meet expectations in some areas, primarily security."

The interior minister has a high-profile role in a nation seeking to stop foreigners crossing the southeastern frontier to join the Islamic State group in Syria. The minister is also on the frontline of efforts to prevent militants infiltrating back into Turkey.

In addition, Turkey has been battling an insurgency by the Kurdish militant group PKK that is seeking autonomy in the southeast of the country.

The group has launched a series of attacks since a cease-fire broke down last year as part of Erdogan’s attempt to attract the nationalist vote and secure majority in parliament for his former and ally party the AKP in the snap elections last November.

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The interior minister position has also been at the center of a campaign to root out sympathizers of the July 15 coup that sought to topple Erdogan and his government.

"Erdogan expects a much more effective fight against Fethullah Gulen organization," the senior official said, adding that "Soylu is one of the names Erdogan trusts the most."

The Turkish authorities have removed from public duties about 80,000 people suspected of having sympathies with the plotters and with a U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom officials accuse of masterminding the putsch.

Earlier Wednesday, the outgoing interior minister had released new figures about the number of people arrested in the Turkey's crackdown against the Islamic State group. Ala said 865 people had been arrested since the start of 2016 alone, and more than half of those were foreigners.

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