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What Would it Take for US to Extradite Muslim Cleric to Turkey?

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What Would it Take for US to Extradite Muslim Cleric to Turkey?



Supporters of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan wave their national flags and hold a portrait of Fethullah Gulen, a U.S.-based Muslim cleric, with Turkish words that read: "the Coup nation traitor, FETO" (Feto is the nickname of Fethullah Gulen), during a pro-government rally at Kizilay main square, in Ankara, Turkey, July 20, 2016.


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Masood Farivar
July 22, 2016 6:00 AM

If Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is hoping the U.S. will quickly spirit his archnemesis Fethullah Gulen out of rural Pennsylvania to stand trial in Turkey for plotting last week's failed coup against his government, he'll be sorely disappointed.

Erdogan has accused Gulen, a Turkish cleric and former political ally with whom he had a falling out in 2013, of engineering Friday's coup attempt from his self-imposed exile in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania, and trying to have Erdogan assassinated as part of the plot.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said Tuesday that Turkey had given evidence of Gulen's involvement to the U.S. government after U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said that Washington wanted hard evidence, not allegations.

But even if the U.S. agrees there is enough evidence to extradite Gulen, the extradition process could take months, if not years — roiling already strained relations between the two long-time NATO allies at a time they're waging a military campaign against the Islamic State in neighboring Syria and Iraq.


People pass by an effigy of Fethullah Gulen, a U.S.-based Muslim cleric, with Turkish words that read: "the traitor, FETO " (Feto is the nickname of Fethullah Gulen) in Ankara, Turkey, July 21, 2016.
"I think what it will really do is to poison the overall atmosphere of the relationship even more than it already has been, and lead to anti-American sentiments about what they'd call in Turkey 'support for terrorism,'" said Aaron Stein, a senior resident fellow at the Atlantic Council who has closely monitored the situation in Turkey.

1979 treaty

Gulen's extradition request will be adjudicated under a 1979 treaty between the U.S. and Turkey, one of more than 100 the U.S. has signed with other countries.

Among other requirements, the treaty spells out the content of the formal request and the channel through which it is communicated. In the case of Gulen — someone who has been accused of a crime but not convicted — it calls for an arrest warrant; a statement of facts of the case; evidence that the offense, though allegedly committed in Turkey, is prosecutable in the U.S.; and the text of the law under which the accused would be tried.

It remains unclear what documents Turkey has turned over to Washington. But it doesn't appear to be a "provisional arrest or detention" warrant, which would require the U.S. to arrest and detain Gulen for up to 60 days to give Turkey time to prepare a formal extradition request and to keep him in custody until a decision is handed down in his extradition case.

Regardless, once the U.S. Department of State and the Department of Justice formally receive the request and determine that it meets all treaty standards, it moves to the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, where Gulen has lived as a permanent resident since 1999, according to two international extradition experts who spoke to VOA.

In the U.S. district court, the case will likely be assigned to a magistrate judge, a relatively low-level member of the U.S. judiciary, with the government of Turkey effectively represented by an Assistant U.S. Attorney and Gulen defended by his own lawyers, said Douglas McNabb, an international criminal lawyer who has handled over three dozen extradition cases. This leg of the process alone could potentially take months.


Supporters of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan hold a placard during a pro-government rally at Kizilay main square, in Ankara, Turkey, July 20, 2016.
If the magistrate judge turns down the extradition request, Gulen would be set free and allowed to remain in the U.S. If, on the other hand, the judge approves it, Gulen's legal team could attempt to block his immediate deportation by appealing the decision in the U.S. federal court system.

Though extradition cases are almost never taken up by the U.S. Supreme Court, McNabb said Gulen's defense team could petition the court to consider the case. Whatever the final court verdict, the extradition would ultimately be decided by the secretary of state.

Political offense exception

The U.S.-Turkey extradition treaty lists 34 categories of "extraditable offenses," crimes ranging from bribery to arson to murder that are prosecutable in both countries and punishable by more than a year in prison. But it also allows for a "political offense exception," a legal concept under which extradition would not be granted if the alleged crime is "political in nature."

The way McNabb reads that language, an "offense committed or attempted against a Head of State or Head of Government" means a plot solely aimed at taking out a foreign leader.

"That's not what occurred here," McNabb said. "What occurred here was an uprising against the government and as part of that, there is an allegation that he tried to have him [Erdogan] assassinated."

The 75-year-old Gulen has dismissed Turkish accusations of leading the coup, which left more than 290 dead and more than 1,400 others wounded, telling Reuters that he'd personally "suffered under multiple coups" in Turkey. He moved to the U.S. after a 1997 soft coup — the fourth military pustch in Turkish history — overthrew the country's then-Islamist leaning government, leading to a period of turmoil in the country.

WATCH: Muslim Cleric Gulen Denies Involvement in Uprising




FILE - Supporters of Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan burn an effigy of U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen hanged by a noose during a pro-government demonstration on Taksim Square in Istanbul, Turkey, July 18, 2016.
Making use of the U.S. court system would help cool tensions with Turkey, Jeffrey said, noting how German Chancellor Angela Merkel defused a crisis in Turkey earlier this year with her decision to allow the prosecution of a German comedian who had drawn threats of a defamation lawsuit from Erdogan over an obscene poem.

Even before Friday's coup attempt, Turkey had asked the U.S. to arrest and extradite Gulen, whom it had designated a terrorist. However, Turkey had never made a formal extradition request. While the U.S. studies the latest Turkey request, analysts in Turkey and the U.S. say Turkey may be blustering, preferring the threat of an extradition to the actual thing.

"What I think is going on is that, for political populist reasons, [Gulen] is far more valuable in the United States under the threat of extradition than he is in Turkey, where he'd be allowed to speak in a trial and be cross examined … where he could reveal potentially damaging things about the government," said Stein of the Atlantic Council.

http://www.voanews.com/content/united-states-extradition-muslim-cleric-gulen-turkey/3430014.html
 
Turn back time to 9/11 when Taliban were asking for proof from yanks for OBL involvement. Sweet irony, now foot is on the other side. This should come as wakeup call to Turks as to who are real friends and who are snakes pretending to be friends.
 
Arright, Imma put what happened in Turkey into context for ya'll...

 
He is a valuable CIA asset, they won't extradite him.
 
He is a valuable CIA asset, they won't extradite him.

Then why don't you 'get him'...? What stopping Erdogan from sending in operatives to get him out? You have a fierce special forces unit; how difficult is it to send in agents?
 
Then why don't you 'get him'...? What stopping Erdogan from sending in operatives to get him out? You have a fierce special forces unit; how difficult is it to send in agents?
Compound is surveillanced and guarded by US government....but if things comes to that....i will no doubt that we will kill him in US soil.
 
Here are few of my suggestions: Turkey should take the matter to the International Forums, ICJ etc..............At least will be able to expose US hypocrisy. :cool: Turkey should talk to Russia and China to voice this issue. Turkish media should start portraying US as a sponsor of terror in Turkey.............Which is actually 101% true.
 
Compound is surveillanced and guarded by US government....but if things comes to that....i will no doubt that we will kill him in US soil.

Exactly.

So US gets to protect a wanted fugitive of your country, and at the same time it expects Turkish soldiers to bleed for NATO's (read US's) wars in other countries because you signed up?

That, is not any friendship or alliance and should tell Turks what their intention is.

I'd like to see what US would do to you had you hidden a US wanted fugitive like Snowden in your country.

You'd have gotten sanctioned and probably invaded too.

We got the same problem with Denmark. They refused and we downgraded our ties with them.
 
American government won't hand over Gulen. He just knows too much. They can't risk him revealing his CIA plans.

They will try to get rid of Erdogan first (May ALLAH keep him safe) and if it doesn't work then it is probably the end for Gulen... in sha ALLAH
 
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Hmmm I guess orchestrating a bloody coup in your ''ally's'' country should be a pretty obvşous one right?
Although I suspect if they dont then we will have to go put down the old , rabid dog ourselves
 

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