Abducted Kyrgyz Educator Says He Was Tortured In Turkey

Supporter of Orhan Inandi rally near the Turkish Embassy in Bishkek in June.

BISHKEK -- A Turkish-Kyrgyz educator who was abducted by Turkish agents in Kyrgyzstan says he was tortured after he was transferred to Turkey.

Orhan Inandi, who headed the Turkish-language Sapat school system in Kyrgyzstan before he was abducted by Turkish agents in Bishkek in June, told his lawyer he was repeatedly beaten while blindfolded after he was brought to Turkey so that he would to confess to terrorism charges.

"He said after he was taken to Turkey that he was tortured for 37 days," his lawyer, Halil Ibrahim Yilmaz, told RFE/RL on February 21. "He had no chance to talk about it [while in custody]."

Turkish media and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan later stated that Inandi had confessed to crimes.

But Yilmaz said in early October that Inandi had retracted his confession, made under duress, and stated he had "no ties to any of the terrorist organizations. I worked in the field of education and youth training and did not commit any illegal actions."

Turkish officials have called Inandi a top Central Asian leader of the Gulen movement, which is led by U.S.-based Turkish cleric Fethullah Gulen, a former close friend of Erdogan before falling out of favor and becoming a rival.

Turkey considers the movement, known as Hizmet in Turkish, to be a terrorist organization, though it is mainly involved in educational activities and promoting civil society. Its schools in Kyrgyzstan are considered prestigious and have been attended by thousands of people, many of them now serving in government.

Turkey blames Gulen supporters for an attempted coup in 2016 that killed some 250 people. Turkey arrested tens of thousands of people while purging the civil service and military of people suspected of being loyal to Gulen. It has also had many so-called Gulenists living abroad extradited to face charges in Turkey.

Inandi, 54, had lived in Kyrgyzstan since 1995 and holds dual Turkish-Kyrgyz citizenship.

Yilmaz said Inandi is in need of medical attention and still suffers from a broken arm that occurred during his abduction.

Inandi is being held in a pretrial detention center in Ankara and is scheduled to have a court hearing on April 14. He faces charges of "managing a terrorist organization," with prosecutors seeking a 22-year prison sentence.

Hundreds of people demonstrated in Kyrgyzstan after his disappearance and abduction last year. Many accused Kyrgyz officials of complicity in the kidnapping.

Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov said such charges were absurd and that Bishkek would demand the quick return of Inandi to his family in Kyrgyzstan. He blamed local authorities for allowing the abduction to take place.

The UN Committee Against Torture said in November that the Kyrgyz state was responsible for Inandi's kidnapping.