Turkey: 12,800 police suspended; authorities raid Kurdish TV
ANKARA, Turkey — Authorities on Tuesday suspended some 12,800 police officers from duty over their suspected links to U.S.-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen as Turkey pressed ahead with its vast crackdown on a network it says is behind the country’s July 15 failed military coup.
Meanwhile, a pro-Kurdish television station said police raided its headquarters in Istanbul and forced it off the air following an order last week for it to be shut down.
Both moves came a day after Turkey announced it was extending by three more months a state of emergency it declared in the aftermath of the failed coup. The existing declaration has aroused fears that the government is using its emergency powers to clamp down on critics.
In a brief statement posted on its website Tuesday, the Turkish police headquarters said the suspended officers were allegedly “in cohesion with or connected to” Gulen’s movement. It said 2,523 of them were police chiefs.

