At the time of the alleged incident, the two men worked for the Turkish embassy in Bern.
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The Office of the Attorney General of Switzerland has issued a national warrant for two Turkish diplomats for allegedly kidnapping a Swiss businessman in Turkey. Diplomatic immunity does not apply to the men, who are also accused of espionage.
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The office confirmed on Monday that they will arrest the Turkish nationals upon entering Switzerland.
At the time of the alleged incident, the two men worked for the Turkish embassy in Bern. One worked as a press attaché, the other as a second embassy secretary. Both men no longer reside in Switzerland.
Criminal proceedings against the two diplomats have been ongoing since March 2017. They will not be granted diplomatic immunity, the foreign affairs ministry said three months ago, judging that the alleged crimes do not fall within the boundaries of diplomatic tasks.
The diplomats are accused specifically of having gathered political intelligence for another state and of having attempted to kidnap a Swiss businessman with Turkish roots.
The Swiss man is supposed to have been a supporter of the Gülen movement, which the Turkish regime says was responsible for the attempted coup that took place in July 2016. The alleged kidnapping was attempted a month after the coup.
The Turkish foreign minister has denied the allegations.
Swiss officials had made it clear to Turkish representatives that intelligence activities directed against the Turkish diaspora in Switzerland was unacceptable, the Swiss News Agency said on Monday.
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Ilhan Saygili said he was sure that “no such activities were conducted within the realm of our embassy”, in an interview with Swiss public television, SRF, on Wednesday. He added that he would be willing to cooperate with the criminal probe being carried out by the Federal Prosecutors Office into the allegations if there was…
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On Friday, the Attorney General’s office confirmed reports on Swiss public television (SRF) of criminal proceedings initiated this month. In a statement, the prosecutor’s office said there was “concrete evidence” that political secret service espionage had taken place. The Attorney General alerted the cabinet to these suspicions and received the go-ahead to proceed by the…
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