More than 50 Nigerians studying in
Turkey have been reportedly arrested by the Turkish police over their alleged
involvement in the failed military coup which took place in the country on July
15th.
According to Thisday, the detained Nigerians are mainly students of Fathi University, one of the private universities in Turkey.
A close relative of one of the students said “Upon arrival at Ataturk International Airport in Istanbul, they were all escorted to a room and their passport confiscated by Turkish police. When they enquired why they were clamped in a dirty room, the police said they are students of a terrorist organisation. They offered to transfer them to government schools but on the condition that we will pay same fees as private universities,”.
According to Thisday, the detained Nigerians are mainly students of Fathi University, one of the private universities in Turkey.
A close relative of one of the students said “Upon arrival at Ataturk International Airport in Istanbul, they were all escorted to a room and their passport confiscated by Turkish police. When they enquired why they were clamped in a dirty room, the police said they are students of a terrorist organisation. They offered to transfer them to government schools but on the condition that we will pay same fees as private universities,”.
The Fathi University is among the
2099 schools, dormitories and universities shut down in the wake of the July
15th failed coup in Turkey. The Turkish authorities said the schools and
universities were terrorist schools because they have links with Islamic
scholar Fethullah Gulen, whom the Turkish government had accused of being the
mastermind of the failed coup attempt. It would also be recalled that the
Turkish Ambassador in Nigeria Hakan Cakil, had requested the Federal government
to close down 17 Turkish schools in Nigeria for alleged links to the Hizmet
movement, a request which was turned down.
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