Erdogan takes legal action against Turkey paper over Syria claim


(MENAFN- The Peninsula) Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday filed a criminal complaint against a top daily newspaper and its editor for publishing images allegedly showing trucks belonging to the state intelligence service helping send weapons to rebels in Syria.

Erdogan has accused the opposition daily Cumhuriyet and its editor-in-chief Can Dundar of "publishing images and information contrary to the truth" and "obtaining and disseminating secret information," the official Anatolia news agency reported.

On Friday Cumhuriyet published footage from January 2014 showing Turkish security forces discovering boxes of what it described as weapons and ammunition being sent to Syria on National Intelligence Organisation (MIT) trucks intercepted near the Syrian border.

The daily said the footage was proof that Turkey was arming Syrian rebels - a claim the Turkish government vehemently denies.

In an interview with state-run TRT television late Sunday, Erdogan accused Dundar of "espionage" and vowed to punish him by saying: "The person who made the story will pay a heavy price. I will not let him get away with it."

Erdogan on Tuesday again rejected claims that Turkey was aiding jihadists in Syria including the Islamic State (IS) group, claiming the intercepted aid was bound for the Turkmen minority in Syria.

Turkish prosecutors had already opened an investigation against the daily on charges of obtaining secret information, espionage and propaganda for a terror group.

The president's lawsuit, filed by his lawyer Muammer Cemaloglu, is a separate criminal complaint.

Erdogan, who ruled Turkey from 2003 to 2014 as premier and since last year as president, is accused by his opponents of growing authoritarianism and intolerance of criticism.

Concerns have mounted in recent months over media rights in Turkey, with legal proceedings launched against several journalists on accusations of criticising or insulting Erdogan.

The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) and the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders condemned Erdogan over his recent attacks on the journalists.


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