Q&A: Turkey's military and the alleged coup plots
- Published
The Ergenekon coup plot trial is widely considered Turkey's most important court case in recent years. It targeted the military establishment, long seen as the guardian of Turkey's secular values.
The 275 defendants included the former armed forces chief - Gen Ilker Basbug - as well as other senior officers, journalists, lawyers, academics and politicians. They were accused of plotting to topple Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government.
The ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party, which is rooted in Islam, has cracked down hard on alleged anti-government conspirators, and there have been other high-profile trials of military officers.
What were the verdicts in the Ergenekon trial?
What is the background to the alleged plot?
What was Gen Basbug's alleged role?
What does the investigation say about relations between the ruling AKP and the military?
It's a long-running investigation with many strands and hundreds of arrests - is the judiciary getting bogged down in it?
What has been the Turkish public's reaction to this?
- Published5 August 2013
- Published5 August 2013
- Published22 August 2023