Investigation “burns” Erdogan: He has a network of 6,000 people in Europe to neutralize his opponents

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This is a research carried out by French journalists, former correspondents in Turkey and presented in a book they published entitled “Wolves love the fog”

They conclude that the President of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has created on a pan-European scale a network of people who, either by legal or illegal means, attempt to neutralize all those who could harm his regime, they conclude the french journalists, former correspondents in Turkey, Laure Marchand and Gilliom Perrier in a book they published under the title “Wolves love fog”, (Les Loups aiment la brume).

It is, as they say, an investigation with an object Turkey’s illegal activities in Europe and in particular about how the Turkish president has developed one entire network to monitor and control what he considers his political opponents. The two journalists are talking about an undeclared army, the spearhead of which is MIT, i.e. the Turkish intelligence services.

Introducing the book, the Le Monde newspaper, whose correspondent in Turkey was one of the authors, Gilliam Perrier (sr. Laure Marchand was from Figaro), says that the Erdogan regime is using its tentacles in Europe to neutralize , to capture or harm his opponents. It is a “spider web” woven by Turkish agencies in Europe, the epicenter of which is in Germany, home to the largest Turkish community in Europe, the newspaper said. It also highlights how this is a group of 6,000 people which is a mixture secret agents, hitmen, diplomats, whistleblowers, political activists, businessmen, etc. which together belong to the so-called “deep state”, which in recent years has been strengthened by the addition of a religious dimension.

The French newspaper notes that, referring specifically to MIT, the two journalists point out that it was involved in the murder of three female activists of the Kurdish PKK party, which took place in an apartment on the rue Lafayette in Paris, on January 9, 2013. The case is not closed, but the French secret services show no willingness to assist the judicial authorities, the journalists note.

In conclusion, the French newspaper underlines that what the book narrates is the movement of folding Turkey in on itself. An “Ottoman” Turkey that sees itself as the center of an empire that needs to be rebuilt.

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