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SWEDEN AND TURKEY

Sweden to extradite self-confessed PKK supporter to Turkey

Sweden's government has decided to extradite a self-confessed supporter of the PKK terror group to Turkey, where he faces a four-year prison sentence for drug crimes.

Sweden to extradite self-confessed PKK supporter to Turkey
A hard copy of Sweden's book of laws. Photo: Johan Nilsson/TT

The government made the decision at a special meeting on Monday, a week after Sweden’s Supreme Court ruled that neither the European Convention of Human Rights or Sweden’s own extradition law provided any reason not to grant Turkey’s request. 

“The government on June 12th, 2023, decided to grant the extradition request regarding a 35-year-old Turkish citizen who has been sentenced to four years and seven months in prison for drug crimes in Turkey,” Ashraf Ahmed, a senior official in Sweden’s justice department told state broadcaster SVT.

The man has claimed that his prosecution in Turkey in reality relates to his activities in the pro-Kurdish HDP party as well as his open support on Facebook for the PKK, which is classed as a terror organisation in Sweden. 

Turkey’s national prosecutor has denied to Sweden’s High Court that the country has any current investigations ongoing against the man regarding “carrying out propaganda for a terror organisation”, or “insulting the Turkish president”. 

The man was arrested in Sweden last year following a request from Turkey’s national prosecutor. 

The Turkish authorities released him from prison two years into his sentence, after which the man travelled to Sweden and got a job. The Turkish prosecutor now wants him to serve the rest of his sentence. 

The extradition is expected to take place in the early summer.

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NATO

Turkey approves Sweden’s Nato application as Erdogan signs ratification

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has signed off on his parliament's ratification of Sweden as a Nato member.

Turkey approves Sweden's Nato application as Erdogan signs ratification

Turkey’s government newspaper on Thursday published a protocol on Sweden’s accession to Nato, a final technical step in Ankara’s ratification of the Nordic nation’s bid to join the US-led alliance.

The Official Gazette’s publication of the law on Sweden’s accession to the alliance, which the Turkish parliament approved on Tuesday, ends a nearly two-year saga that tested Ankara’s relations with its Western allies.

Erdogan had earlier signed the document, meaning that Turkey has completed all its required steps.

EXPLAINED:

Turkey’s green light leaves Hungary as the last holdout in an accession process that Sweden and Finland, which had adhered to decades of military non-alignment, began in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine nearly two years ago.

Finland became the 31st nation of the alliance last April.

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said on Thursday he was ready to meet his Hungarian counterpart Viktor Orban to help pave the way for Budapest’s quick approval of the bid.

Nato membership applications require unanimous ratifications by all alliance members.

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