Why Has Turkey Imprisoned US Pastor on Terror Charges Without Evidence?
A Turkish police officer stands guard in front of St Antouan Church at Istiklal Street in Istanbul, Turkey.
The Turkish government's refusal to
explain why it's imprisoned American Pastor Andrew Brunson, who served
the country's people for 23 years before being arrested last year, has
left the pastor's family in a state of shock and confusion, the American
Center for Law and Justice has said.
Although Turkish authorities have
charged Brunson with having links to a terror organization, the ACLJ
said no evidence has been provided to support their claim. What is more,
the pastor's case has been sealed, leaving his Turkish attorney with no
way of preparing a defense.
"Really, the only thing we can point
to is the attempted coup last July and President [Recep Tayyip]
Erdogan's need to gather up anyone who he might potentially consider to
be a threat. Other than that, there is nothing," ACLJ Senior Counsel
CeCe Heil told The Christian Post in a phone interview on Monday about
why Brunson has been targeted.
"They have provided no evidence.
The case has been sealed," Heil added, noting that the Turkish attorney
"does not have access to anything."
Brunson has spent more than
125 days in a Turkish prison, having missed
Thanksgiving, Christmas, and
his birthday locked away among 19 prisoners in a 10-person cell, the
conservative law group said in an update last week. (Photo: The American Center for Law and Justice)American Pastor Andrew Brunson in this undated photo.Brunson,
who led a Protestant church in Izmir, was arrested alongside his wife,
Norine, back in October, when they were summoned to discuss the renewal
of their visas. Norine was released two weeks later, but the pastor
continues to be held over the terror charges.
Heil noted that the ACLJ hasn't had direct contact with the pastor during his incarceration.
Brunson's
daughter, Jacqueline, an 18-year-old college student in North Carolina,
wasn't available to speak with CP for this report, though the ACLJ
explained that she has already had to postpone her wedding as she waits
for her father to be released.
"I know that they are shocked,"
Heil told CP about Brunson's wife and children who are all back home in
the United States, adding that the mystery of why their father is being
held hostage by Turkish authorities has left them "shocked and
confused."
The pastor's daughter said in a previous statement last
year: "I grew up in Turkey and saw firsthand how much he loves Turkey
and the Turkish people. He has exhibited nothing but love, mercy and
grace during his time there."
The otherwise strong diplomatic relations between the U.S. and Turkey compound the case.
As The Hill and
other publications have highlighted, the two countries have "enjoyed a
fruitful, bilateral relationship" for over 50 years, and have co-chaired
the Global Counterterrorism Forum to fight the rise of extremism, along
with other joint initiatives focused on peace and security.
"Turkey
is a NATO alley. They typically pride themselves in being more focused
on religious freedom, and so it's very surprising that they will have
arrested Pastor Brunson and provided no evidence," Heil said, noting
that initially the pastor wasn't even allowed access to an attorney or
to any U.S. consular officials.
The ACLJ's European affiliate, the
European Centre for Law & Justice, has submitted a written
statement to the United Nations Human Rights Council, where the
organization urges the U.N. to pressure Turkey to release the pastor and
allow him to return home to his family.
A bipartisan letter to
Turkey from 37 U.S. Senators, led by the Chairman and Ranking Member of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the Chairman and Ranking
Member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, further focused on the
close ties between the two countries, and called for Brunson's release.
The
ACLJ has also sent a letter of its own to Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson, expanding on the broader issue of Christian persecution in
the region.
"Last year, following a failed military coup, Turkey
began a crackdown that has disappointingly swept up innocent religious
minorities — especially Christians — in an ever-widening dragnet," the
letter said, arguing that Brunson has been caught up in that dragnet.
"Christians
and other religious minorities are now increasingly the targets of
detention and deportation, and are unreasonably subjected to other
governmental regulation simply because of their faith."
Despite all these efforts, Turkey is refusing to provide any evidence for the charges against the pastor, Heil said.
"We
have been working with the State Department from the beginning, and of
course there has been an election and a transition. We just want to make
sure that Secretary Tillerson is updated on the latest information,"
surrounding the pastor's case, the ACLJ Senior Counsel continued.
Heil also shared hopes that President Donald Trump's administration "will get involved and engaged" in the case.
She
said that the Turkish attorney is preparing an appeal over the case,
and called for international advocacy efforts to continue pushing for
Brunson's release.
An ACLJ petition calling
for the pastor's freedom has so far received over
211,000 signatures,
and Heil urged people to continue signing it and voicing their concern
and support for the pastor, whose future remains uncertain.
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