Turkey: Ex-chief of police handed 2,170-year jail term in match-fixing case

Turkey: Ex-chief of police handed 2,170-year jail term in match-fixing case

PanARMENIAN.Net - A Turkish court on Friday, June 4 sentenced a media executive and a former police chief to 1,406 and 2,170 years in prison, respectively, for conspiring to bring match-fixing charges against top soccer club Fenerbahce, Reuters reports.

Fenerbahce's president was jailed for match-fixing a decade ago and the club was barred from playing in European competitions for two seasons, but the case was reopened after prosecutors said it was founded on a conspiracy.

The 2011 match-fixing charges were made by prosecutors linked to Fethullah Gulen, a U.S.-based cleric who Turkey says staged an attempted coup in 2016, an accusation Gulen denies. Turkish soccer at the time was beset by allegations of match-fixing, which Fenerbahce was accused of spearheading.

Fenerbahce's former president Aziz Yildirim was sentenced to six years in prison after being charged with match-fixing and forming an illegal organisation. He spent a year behind bars.

In 2016, an Istanbul prosecutor's indictment alleged the 2011 match-fixing charges were a plot by Gulen supporters, who had infiltrated the Turkish judiciary and police, to frame the club and topple its executives.

The court on Friday sentenced Hidayet Karaca, who was the head of Samanyolu media group - later shut down by the government - to 1,406 years in jail. Karaca was accused of instigating the tapping of phone calls and forging of documents.

Former police chief Nazmi Ardic was sentenced to 2,170 years on charges including forging documents and conspiring against the club. The court handed down jail sentences to at least 25 other defendants, state-owned news agency Anadolu said.

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