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Freed US Pastor To Return Home From Turkey, Says Trump

  US President Donald Trump said Friday an American pastor freed by Turkey after two years in detention would be returned “soon” to the United … Continue reading Freed US Pastor To Return Home From Turkey, Says Trump


Pastor Andrew Craig Brunson (R), escorted by Turkish plain clothes police officers as he arrives at his house on July 25, 2018 in Izmir. A Turkish court on July 25, 2018 ruled to place under house arrest an American pastor who has been imprisoned for almost two years on terror-related charges in a case that has raised tensions with the United States, state media said. The state-run Anadolu news agency said he was being put under house arrest, although it was not clear if he had already left prison. STRINGER / AFP
Pastor Andrew Craig Brunson (R), escorted by Turkish plainclothes police officers as he arrives at his house on July 25, 2018 in Izmir. STRINGER / AFP

 

US President Donald Trump said Friday an American pastor freed by Turkey after two years in detention would be returned “soon” to the United States.

“PASTOR BRUNSON JUST RELEASED. WILL BE HOME SOON!” Trump tweeted after a Turkish court sentenced Andrew Brunson to just over three years in jail but released him after taking into account time served and good conduct.

Brunson’s detention since 2016 caused one of the worst diplomatic rows of recent times between NATO allies Turkey and the US, and a crash in the Turkish lira that exposed the country’s economic fragility.

Turkish judicial authorities had repeatedly rejected requests for the release of Brunson, who was moved from prison to house arrest in the city of Izmir in July.

When the verdict was read out, Brunson wept and hugged his wife Norine.

“My thoughts and prayers are with Pastor Brunson, and we hope to have him safely back home soon!” Trump had tweeted earlier, shortly after posting that he was “working very hard” on the case.

US broadcaster NBC said Turkey and the United States had reached a secret deal for Brunson to be released Friday, with some charges against him dropped, in exchange for the US easing “economic pressure” that included sanctions that have hammered the lira.

But Turkey says its judiciary is independent and US State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said she was “not aware” of any such deal.

AFP