The German Interior Ministry said on Monday that 35
Turkish citizens with diplomatic passports had applied for asylum
after a failed military coup in Turkey in July that was followed by
a crackdown on suspected supporters of the putsch.
Interior Ministry spokesman Johannes Dimroth told a regular
government news conference the figure included Turkish diplomats as
well as their family members, but did not say if they had all been
based in Germany.
He said he could not give any more details on the diplomats and
their motivation to apply for asylum in Germany.
At the Turkish embassy in Berlin, nobody was immediately
available to comment
It was not clear if the Turkish government has requested the
extradition of the diplomats by German authorities.
In Turkey, more than 32,000 people were put in jail and 100,000
have been dismissed from jobs in the security and civil services
for their alleged links to a religious network the government says
staged the July 15 military coup.
The scale of the purges has drawn criticism from opposition
politicians and Western allies that President Tayyip Erdogan may be
using the coup to consolidate power.
Accused mastermind, U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, denies
involvement in the unsuccessful coup that killed 240 people who
resisted it and around 100 rogue troops.