The report said that the plotters of the first coup attempt, which was dubbed as a putsch against President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, were still uncertain. Fetullah Gülen, the U.S.-based leader of the FETÖ terror group, remains the prime suspect in all trials and faces aggravated life imprisonment for his role in masterminding the coup attempt.
Meanwhile, Istanbul police found a machine Saturday that printed and distributed political leaflets, which contained material provoking people against President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, in a hotel room booked by a German national in Istanbul's Taksim district.
The leaflets, which claimed that the protest was financed by the German Federal Government and the State of Bavaria, called on people to riot against "dictatorship."
A recent report entitled, "The FETÖ Settlement in Germany and Germany's FETÖ Policy," has revealed that FETÖ has been using Germany as its main functioning center and that German authorities have embraced the structures of the group with open arms.
The report, published by the Foundation for Social, Political and Economic Research (SETA) advocates for Germany to treat FETÖ in the same manner that it treats the PKK terrorist organization, warning that if there was no change Germany's relations with Turkey could be forced into a difficult position.
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