Crime & Courts

M'sian police arrest 3rd Turk for "posing threat to national security"

KUALA LUMPUR: A third Turkish national has been arrested in Malaysia, his lawyer said Friday, after two others were taken into custody this week on suspicion of funding the Islamic State (IS) group.

Turkish academic Ismet Ozcelik was arrested Thursday, his lawyer Rosli Dahlan told AFP, adding that no official reasons were provided by authorities.

Local media reported Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar as saying that the Turk was arrested because he posed “a threat to national security.”

No further details were given.

However, Turkey's state-run news agency said Ismet, along with the two other Turks arrested this week, are linked to a US-based preacher accused of organising a failed coup last year.

Ismet was initially arrested in Dec for allegedly assaulting an immigration official, but was freed on bail in Jan.

On Tuesday, two Turkish nationals – Turgay Karaman and Ihsan Aslan – were arrested under the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act, which allows police to detain them for 28 days, in a move that raised concerns about Malaysia acting on possible pressure from Ankara.

But Malaysia's Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said on Thursday that the country's anti-terrorism police unit had been investigating the two men, along with a number of others, for "spreading, influencing and funding" IS activities.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government has detained or sacked tens of thousands of people under a state of emergency imposed after last year's failed coup.

The crackdown focuses on alleged supporters of preacher Fethullah Gulen, blamed for the failed putsch.

Police chief Khalid denied claims that the authorities are acting on Turkey's request.

"We have our own laws to protect national security. We have the right to determine who we want to arrest and detain," he was quoted as saying in the Malay Mail Online.

"Anyone who threatens our national security is not welcomed here." -- AFP

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