Turkish prosecutor rules non-suit over armed attack on opposition politician

A Turkish prosecutor in Ankara has ruled non-suit for two suspects linked to a neo-nationalist movement, who are accused of attacking a top opposition party official, news site Ankara Gazetecisi reported on Saturday.
The Future Party’s Selçuk Özdağ
was violently attacked as he got into his car in Ankara on Jan. 15, a day after
receiving threats from the deputy head of the far-right Nationalist Movement
Party (MHP) against him.
Five men were taken into police
custody over the incident. The prosecutor’s indictment called for the
defendants, Abdurrahman Gülseren, Berke Aygün, Gülahmet Türk, Kadir Hukanoğlu
and Muhammet Raşit Gürsoy, to be sentenced to nine years in prison for
deliberate injury of Özdağ and up to five years for threatening his driver with
a gun.
The indictment failed to mention
the suspects’ affiliation with the Grey Wolves organization, an
ultra-nationalist paramilitary movement affiliated with the MHP.
Europe has been cracking down on
the ultranationalist Grey Wolves organization. France outlawed the Grey Wolves
in early November, 2020, with the party being accused of "extremely
violent" acts and intimidation by government spokesman Gabriel Attal.
German opposition politicians have also called for a ban on the Grey Wolves,
branded by the domestic security agency of the country as a far-right hardline
party. A motion urging the Dutch government to prohibit the Grey Wolves and to
urge the European Union to enforce a ban was supported in November last year by
members of the Dutch Parliament.