A Turkish court has accepted an indictment seeking up to 12 years in prison for 103 retired admirals over a warning they issued in April about a possible threat to a treaty governing the use of Turkey’s key waterways due to a canal project supported by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, local media reported on Friday.
The indictment drafted by the Ankara Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office, which charges the former admirals with “using force and violence in an attempt to overturn the constitutional order,” was accepted by the Ankara 20th High Criminal Court on Friday, Turkish media reports said.
The former admirals had publicly criticized Erdoğan’s plans to develop an artificial waterway in İstanbul known as Kanal Istanbul.
Kanal Istanbul’s construction would result in Turkey abandoning the 1936 Montreux Convention governing the use of the Bosporus and Dardanelles straits, angering Russia and losing its neutrality in the volatile region, they warned.
An investigation was launched into the former admirals after the president accused them of “hinting at a political coup,” in a country where the hint of military insubordination raises the specter of past coups.
The official approval in March of plans to develop a 45-kilometer (28-mile) shipping lane in İstanbul comparable to the Panama or Suez canals has opened up a debate about Turkey’s commitment to the 1936 Montreux Convention, which is aimed at demilitarizing the Black Sea by setting strict commercial and naval rules on passage through the Bosporus and Dardanelles straits leading to the Mediterranean.
Erdoğan was given the power to pull Turkey out of treaties without parliament’s approval in 2018 when he was elected for a second term as president, but this time under a presidential system of governance that granted him vast powers.