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Turkey coup: Greek court says it won't extradite officers seeking asylum

Turkey may still appeal the case but any final decision rests with the Greek judiciary

A Greek police officer escorts a Turkish officer, who fled to Greece after the 15 July failed coup, in Alexandroupoli on 21 July (AFP)

A Greek appeals court on Thursday ruled against the extradition of two Turkish coup suspects demanded by Ankara, after deciding to protect another three and sending back three others.

The Athens court accepted a prosecutor's arguments that the two military officers - from a total eight seeking asylum in Greece - would be at risk if sent back to Turkey.

They followed a similar reasoning earlier this week for another three of the officers - but approved the deportation of the remaining three for "attempting to topple the regime" of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in July, a judicial source said.

All eight men were in the same helicopter that landed in the northern Greek city of Alexandroupolis in July, hours after the failed military coup against Erdogan.

Greek government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopoulos has said the Greek authorities would follow the court rulings "irrespective of the political cost."

In rejecting extradition, the appeals court said Ankara had not provided sufficient evidence tying five of the eight officers to the coup.

'Greece is in the NATO alliance with Turkey and is a NATO ally. Our expectation is that the Greek government make every effort to return'

- Fikri Isik, Turkish defence minister

That decision outraged Ankara, which has arrested tens of thousands of people as part of a wide-ranging crackdown since the attempted putsch.

"Greece is in the NATO alliance with Turkey and is a NATO ally. Our expectation is that the Greek government make every effort to return" those individuals to Turkey, Defence Minister Fikri Isik said Monday.

The case will now be heard by the Greek Supreme Court. Turkey may still appeal the case, and any final decision to extradite rests with the Greek justice minister.

Why case is awkward for Athens

The two Turkish commanders, four captains and two sergeants requested asylum in Greece after landing in Alexandroupolis shortly after the attempted government takeover in mid-July.

The officers are currently also appealing against a Greek refusal to grant them asylum in September. They say they would not receive a fair trial in Turkey.

READ: Why Ankara is turning east

The case is awkward for Greece, which depends on Turkey to stem the flow of tens of thousands of migrants to its shores.

Several Turkish nationals, including civil servants and businessmen, have sought refuge in Greece following the coup attempt.

NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg last month said an unspecified number of Turkish officers serving in NATO command positions had requested asylum in those alliance member states following the botched coup. 

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