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Turkish media close to Gülen Movement say they were shut out by gov’t

Turkish media close to a US-based Islamic preacher accused by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of seeking to usurp power say they have been shut out of government press events in a move they see as evidence of Turkey's deteriorating press freedoms.

Correspondents from the Zaman and Bugün newspapers, the Samanyolu TV station and the Cihan news agency say they have been banned from the presidential palace since Erdoğan's inauguration in August and no longer receive official press releases.

Erdoğan, whose ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) has roots in political Islam, accuses preacher Fethullah Gülen of building a "parallel state" of followers in institutions including the police and judiciary in a bid to seize the levers of state power.

Erdoğan says Gülen orchestrated a corruption scandal against his inner circle last year in an attempted "judicial coup," a charge Gülen denies, and has described the preacher's "Hizmet" (Service) network as a threat to national security.

The media ban was extended to key ministries including the prime minister's office and the ministry of foreign affairs a few days after a National Security Council meeting last month, according to journalists from Gülen-linked media outlets.

"This is a war, a fight, an effort to wipe out Hizmet," said Tercan Ali Baştürk of the Gülen-affiliated Journalists and Writers Foundation (GYV), seeing the ban as "punishment" for their news organizations' coverage of the corruption probe.

The Foreign Ministry declined to comment but government officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, defended the move.

"The priority of some press institutions is not journalism but serving their political agenda. ... There are journalists who criticize the government and are still covering it, but the Gülenists had a particular agenda," one official said.

Erdoğan's domination of the media, much of it owned by conglomerates with business ties to the AK Party, has pushed Turkey, which is a candidate for membership of the European Union, toward the bottom of global press freedom rankings.

In its October report on Turkey's progress toward accession, the European Commission raised concerns about press freedom in Turkey and called on the government to "promote dialogue across the political spectrum."

It also chastised Turkey for interfering in the judiciary following the corruption probe.

Cihan's general director Abdülhamit Bilici said the media ban was damaging the news agency's business and threatened legal action.

"It's financial discrimination," he told Reuters, comparing the situation to restrictions imposed after a 1997 military coup. "We were on the blacklist then when it was a military coup. Now we're having the same from a civilian organization."

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