US urges fair, transparent probe into detained Turkish police chiefs
Washington has again called for âfair, transparent and democraticâ investigations into more than 100 police officers and chiefs who have been detained after leading graft probes into government figures late last year.
âWe are closely following these developments, and I understand theyâre related to the ongoing corruption investigations in Turkey, including the recent arrest of some 100 police officials,â Marie Harf, deputy spokesperson for the State Department, said during a daily press briefing July 23.
âWe have repeatedly said that any investigation should be conducted in a fair, transparent, and democratic manner. We have, in the past, made clear concerns about Turkeyâs due process and effective access to justice, and weâll continue talking to the Turks about it,â she said.
âWe continue to support the Turkish peopleâs desire for a judicial system that meets the highest standards of fairness, timeliness, and transparency. Obviously thatâs something we care very deeply about,â Harf said.
Responding to a question over Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄanâs remarks that he had not been able to directly talk to U.S. President Barack Obama on the phone in recent times, Harf said U.S. State Secretary John Kerry was in direct contact with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet DavutoÄlu.
âObviously, for the presidentâs conversations, the White House can speak mostly â or best to that. In terms of the secretaryâs conversations, obviously he speaks all the time with Foreign Minister DavutoÄlu. He spoke with him twice yesterday [July 22] and spoke with him a number of times over the last few days as well. So we have an ongoing...
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