UPDATE | Turkish prime minister: 120 arrested so far in coup attempt
ANKARA, Turkey (AP)
Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, speaking to state-run Anadolu Agency, says more than 120 people have been arrested in a coup plot that started late Friday night and has contnued into Saturday morning.
“Things are getting better every minute,” he said.
Yildirim called on people to remain in the streets to support the government against coup plotters and appealed for patience.
He says a few air force planes flown by coup plotters still remain in the air. He has earlier ordered those aircraft shot down.
A lawyer for the government sayid “there are indications of direct involvement” in the coup attempt of a cleric who is living in exile in Pennsylvania.
Robert Amsterdam said in a statement Friday evening that he and his firm “have attempted repeatedly to warn the U.S. government of the threat posed” by Fethullah Gulen and his movement.
According to Turkish intelligence sources, he said, “there are signs that Gulen is working closely with certain members of military leadership against the elected civilian government.”
The president of a group that promotes Gulen’s ideas denied the charges.
Y. Alp Aslandogan of the New York-based Alliance for Shared Values tells The Associated Press “we categorically deny such accusations and find them to be highly irresponsible.”
Earlier in the evening, the alliance said, “we condemn any military intervention in (the) domestic politics of Turkey.”
Meanwhile, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his general secretary was abducted by coup-makers and there is no information on the chief of the military staff.
Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, speaking on NTV, says he has ordered the “annihilitation” of military planes used by coup plotters. He says military jets have taken off from an air base in Eskisehir, east of Ankara.
According to transcripts of the president’s remarks provided by his office, Erdogan said that he arrived in Istanbul from the holiday resort of Marmaris, which was also bombed after he left there.
He says: “Those who drive around in tanks will have to go back to where they came from. ... The most important thing right now is that millions of Turkish citizens are on the streets at 4.30 a.m.”
He says coup makers “are a minority within the military.”
According to Erdogan, “Turkey has a democratically elected government and president. We are in charge and we will continue exercising our powers until the end. We will not abandon our country to these invaders. It will end well.”