Former intelligence chief sentenced to prison for deporting Turkish teachers, doctor secretly
Fox News
A court sentenced Kosovo’s former intelligence chief to prison Wednesday for secretly deporting five Turkish teachers and a Turkish doctor to Turkey.
The court in Pristina convicted Driton Gashi, the former director of the Kosovo Intelligence Agency, of abuse of official post or authority and gave him a prison term of four years and eight months.
Once he is released from custody, Gashi is not allowed to serve in any public positions for four years, the court said.
The six Turks were arrested and had their Kosovo residency permits revoked in March 2018 for allegedly being a threat to national security. Gashi had not legally proven they were a threat but had them deported before the charges were considered by a court.
He also did not let the country’s prime minister, president and prosecutor general know in advance about the move, as the law requires.
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Upon their return to Turkey, the six were arrested and imprisoned.
In Kosovo, the teachers worked with schools owned by Fethullah Gulen, a U.S.-based Muslim cleric whom the government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan blames for an attempted military coup in July 2016.
Tens of thousands of alleged Gulen supporters have been arrested or lost their jobs in Turkey since the failed coup. Many have proclaimed their innocence. Gulen has denied he and his supporters were behind the attempt to topple Erdogan’s government.
Kosovo’s then-prime minister, Ramush Haradinaj, said the deportations to Turkey were a bilateral operation of the intelligence services of the two countries.
Haradinaj fired both Gashi and the interior minister over the operation, calling it a “violation of the decision-making hierarchy” and “an institutional precedent that should not happen in the future.”
Rights groups, the U.S. ambassador to Kosovo and students also criticized what happened to the Turkish teachers and doctor.
The deportations were criticized by rights groups, the then-U.S. ambassador and students in Kosovo.