High-ranking Gülenist fugitive Kemal Öksüz nabbed in Armenia on US arrest warrant
While being sought with a red notice by the Interpol, high ranking FETO fugitive Kemal Öksüz, who changed his name to Kevin after receiving U.S. citizenship, was detained in Armenia on Wednesday over an arrest warrant issued by Washington for breaching congress ethics and fraud, Armenian police told reporters.
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- Published Date: 12:00 | 30 August 2018
- Modified Date: 04:06 | 30 August 2018
Kemal Öksüz, a high ranking member of the Gülenist Terror Group (FETO) and the brother of Adil Öksüz, the mastermind of the July 15, 2016 coup attempt, was arrested Wednesday in Armenia over a U.S. arrest warrant issued for breaching congress ethics and fraud.
Öksüz, who changed his name to Kevin after receiving U.S. citizenship, was being sought with a red notice by the Interpol, according Armenpress agency. Öksüz was running a business and an NGO in Armenia, according to the report.
Armenpress reported that Armenian police said Öksüz was being sought since the very first day of being declared wanted, and the Armenian police chief personally supervised the operations.
A former businessman, Öksüz was the chairman of the Texas-based NGO Turquoise Council of Americans and Eurasians (TCAE), a Gülenist regional umbrella organization that controlled several other Gülenist non-profits.
As a common practice to promote their political agenda and business interests, which is mainly exploiting the U.S. charter school system with dozens of schools, Gülenists often organized paid-for trips to Turkey and its surrounding region for U.S. senators, congress members, state officials and local officials, in addition to dinners, award events and panels.
Öksüz and the TCAE came under federal scrutiny by the Congressional Ethics Committee for coordinating a trip in 2013 where dozens of U.S. Members of Congress traveled to Azerbaijan for a conference illegally sponsored by its state oil company, SOCAR. He previously pleaded the Fifth Amendment while politicians involved in the trip were fined by the ethics committee.
The report said that the U.S. declared Öksüz wanted on Aug. 23 on four counts of fraud, including submitting falsified documentation to the ethics committee of the U.S. House of Representatives. Accordingly, Öksüz said that his NGO, which covered the funding for the trip, did not receive funds from any source but the trip was in fact funded by SOCAR.
A Washington Post article from 2015 reported that ten U.S. Congress members and 32 staff members who attended the trip also received valuable gifts worth thousands of dollars. Three former top aides to President Barack Obama appeared as speakers at the event. The funding of the trip raised eyebrows in Washington D.C. as the Post reported that the trip came at a time when SOCAR, which has joint projects with Russian and Iranian companies, was looking for exemptions from U.S. sanctions targeting Iran for the Southern Gas Corridor project involving British Petroleum (BP), Turkish Petroleum (TPAO), Turkish Petroleum Pipeline Corporation (BOTAŞ) and many others.
It is not clear whether SOCAR's trip had an effect on the decision making of U.S. lawmakers and Obama since various U.S. oil giants like ExxonMobil and Chevron, in addition to U.K.'s BP and Norway's Statoil have stakes in Azeri oil and gas fields in the Caspian Sea, alongside Russian and Iranian companies. However, some of these lawmakers sponsored legislations promoting U.S. energy interests in the Caspian.
The case' ties with Armenia's arch enemy Azerbaijan's national oil company and an energy project bypassing Armenian territories might have impelled Armenian officials to promptly respond to the case.
Öksüz was also the owner of company that served as a major vendor for Harmony Public Schools in Texas, which is the largest Gülenist school network in the U.S., according to the book "Empire of Deceit: An Investigation of the Gülen Charter School Network" published by attorney Robert Amsterdam and his law firm, which represent Turkey in lawsuits in the U.S.
Harmony operates more than 50 schools in Texas and receives more than $250 million in public funding every year. It also serves as a regional oversight entity for all Gülen-linked school networks and organizations in several states included in the shadowy group's Greater Texas region.
Gülenist schools are being accused of exploiting and defrauding the charter school system by emigrating a large number of their sympathizers to the U.S. with H1-B visas and using affiliated vendors to funnel millions of U.S. public money into their own organization.
Öksüz and the TCAE are also known for hefty donations mainly aimed at the Democratic Party.
Kemal Öksüz is also the brother of former theology professor Adil Öksüz, who is known as the highest-ranking "imam" that directed FETO-linked former soldiers and officers in the attempt to overthrow the democratically-elected Turkish government on July 15, 2016. Öksüz, also known as the "air force imam," was detained in the early hours of July 16 near the Akıncı Air Base near Ankara, from where the plot was being directed, before being released by FETO-linked judges. He has been missing ever since. There have recently been reports claiming he is currently hiding in Berlin, Germany.
After the July 15, 2016 coup attempt, which killed 250 people and injured 2,200 others, members of the FETO have hidden out abroad, with the U.S., where the terrorist group runs a vast charter school empire, being an important destination.
Öksüz, in the year before the coup attempt, traveled to the U.S. several times, where he, according to indictments, conferred with FETO leader Fetullah Gülen, who lives in an expansive compound in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania.
Öksüz' family also has other connections to the U.S. A recent report by Anadolu Agency (AA) said that Adil Öksüz took his three children and his wife, Aynur, to the U.S., a month before the coup attempt to live with her brother, Abdulhadi Yıldırım, who is also believed to be a senior FETO member. Aynur Öksüz and Yıldırım were spotted in their home and business in New Jersey.