A Turkish court convicted American pastor Andrew Brunson of aiding terrorism yesterday – but sentenced him to just time served and ordered his immediate release.
Erin Cunningham Aliaga
October 13 2018 2:30 AM
A Turkish court convicted American pastor Andrew Brunson of aiding terrorism yesterday – but sentenced him to just time served and ordered his immediate release.
The case of the evangelical preacher caught up in Turkey’s post-coup security sweep had garnered the attention of the highest levels of the American administration and become a sore point in the two countries‘ relations.
Brunson’s trial had resumed yesterday in western Turkey, where he headed a small evangelical congregation, just hours after US officials said that a deal had been reached with Turkish authorities to secure his release.
Brunson (50) has been held for two years on what he and the Trump administration said were false terrorism and espionage-related charges. Prosecutors accused the pastor of being linked both to Kurdish separatists and the US-based Muslim cleric who Turkish authorities say orchestrated a failed coup attempt in 2016.
Brunson was released on house arrest in July due to health reasons but his ongoing trial has helped deepen a rift between Turkey and the United States, already at odds over the latter’s support for Kurdish-led fighters battling Isil in Syria.
Vice-president Mike Pence took a particular interest in Brunson’s case and has helped mobilise Trump’s evangelical political base to the cause.
In recent months, the administration made Brunson’s release a priority, and in August, the United States imposed sanctions on two senior Turkish cabinet ministers as a way to pressure authorities.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had said that his government could not interfere in a judicial case. But US officials said that an agreement between the two sides to free Brunson was negotiated on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly last month.
The deal, they said, would include the lifting of US sanctions in exchange for reduced charges that would allow Brunson to either be sentenced to time served or serve any remaining sentence in the United States.
Turkish prosecutors had sought a 35-year sentence for Brunson, who they accused of spying and supporting terrorists under the cover of humanitarian aid and interfaith dialogue. That request was later reduced to 10 years at the trial.
He was swept up in the wave of arrests that followed the botched military coup in 2016, during which tens of thousands of people – including artists, intellectuals and ordinary Turks – were detained. But prosecutors also alleged he supported members of the Kurdistan Workers‘ Party, or PKK, which has waged a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state.
The PKK is a staunchly secular and leftist organisation. The indictment against Brunson quotes a witness as saying congregants at Brunson’s Resurrection Church in Izmir province wore the „flags and pennants of the PKK terrorist organisation“.
But at the courthouse in Izmir’s Aliaga district yesterday, a series of witnesses for the prosecution, including one who appeared via video conference, gave scattered and at times contradictory testimony.
One witness, Levent Kalkan, said investigators misunderstood his original testimony that had implicated Brunson in harbouring coup suspects in 2016. The man that Mr Kalkan has said witnessed the protection of the fugitives appeared in court yesterday to say that he had seen no such thing. „I never told Levent that,“ the witness, Yilmaz Demirjan, said.
Brunson, who sat alone in front of a panel of judges and the state prosecutor, was also allowed to speak following each witness’s testimony.
„I never met any PKK fighters,“ he said.
His parents rejoiced yesterday on learning that a court had ordered their son to be released.
Pamela Brunson, the mother of the pastor, of Black Mountain, in North Carolina, said: „Praise God. I’m so excited. Oh, that’s wonderful. We’re so happy.
„We are overjoyed that God has answered the prayers of so many people around the world,“ she said.
Irish Independent
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