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MILITARY

Turkey attachés in Greece ‘fled to Italy’ after failed coup

Two Turkish military attachés posted in Greece fled to Italy at the weekend following last month's failed coup, Turkey's top diplomat said on Thursday, saying Ankara was working to track them down.

Turkey attachés in Greece 'fled to Italy' after failed coup
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses people after the failed coup. Photo: Kayhan Ozer Presidential Press Service/AFP

Speaking to NTV television, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said colonels Halis Tunc and Ilhan Yasitli left on August 6th, taking the car ferry across the Adriatic Sea to Italy.

“We are working to bring both these traitors back to Turkey,” he said, without detailing the allegations against them.

“The Greek authorities recorded this. Tunc's brother lives in Holland. We are working with both the Netherlands and Italy,” he said.

Earlier this week, media reports said the pair had gone missing. Yasitli is reported to be the overall military attache and Tunc the naval attache but their accreditation with Athens has been cancelled.

Turkey has embarked on a wholescale purge of the military in the wake of the coup which was blamed on followers of the US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen.

In a separate case that has strained improving ties between Ankara and Athens, eight Turkish military officers fled by helicopter to Greece after the failed coup of July 15th. To block their deportation back to Turkey, they have applied for asylum.

They have been handed suspended two-month prison terms for illegal entry and will remain in police custody until their asylum hearing on August 19th.

Two Turkish generals serving in the Nato force in Afghanistan were also detained in Dubai last month on suspicion of links to the failed coup.