More Turkish police held as PM Erdogan says purge just beginning

By Daren Butler ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Dozens of Turkish police officers were detained on Tuesday in a widening probe of wiretapping allegedly targeting Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, and he said operations against his foes within the state apparatus were just beginning. Police took 33 of their colleagues into custody on Tuesday in Istanbul, Ankara and across southeast Turkey, NTV said, days ahead of the country's first presidential election which opinion polls forecast Erdogan will win. More than 100 officers were detained in July in the same investigation, aimed at what Erdogan calls a "parallel structure" within the police, judiciary and other institutions loyal to U.S.-based Islamic cleric Fethullah Gulen. Erdogan accuses Gulen, a former ally, of being behind a plot to oust him and has vowed to "go into their lairs" and carry out a "witch hunt" to catch those involved. "The structure in the parallel police has started to emerge," Erdogan said in an interview with Kanal 24 late on Monday, accusing Turkey's main opposition parties of operating in tandem with Gulen. "God willing this will come to an end. But I have to say that we are just at the beginning of this business," he said, describing Gulen's movement as a threat to national security. "The judiciary has now started to do what is necessary." Gulen and his Hizmet, or 'Service', movement denies scheming against Erdogan, but the alliance between Hizmet and the government has crumbled in recent years. Of the 115 officers detained in July, 31 have been remanded in custody pending possible trial. Many of them have said the case against them was politically motivated. The arrests follow a stream of purges targeting the police, judiciary and other state institutions this year which government critics have condemned as a symptom of Erdogan's tightening grip on power. Gulen, whose followers say they number in the millions, is believed to have built up influence in the police and judiciary over decades and leads a powerful worldwide Islamic movement from his self-imposed exile in the United States. "COUP ATTEMPT" Those detained on Tuesday were largely low ranking officers, according to media reports. Senior anti-terror squad chiefs were among those held previously. "I worked day and night and this is what I get for it," one of the suspects was reported as saying by CNN Turk as he was led away by plain-clothed police from the organised crime squad. Police declined to comment on the investigation. The breakdown in relations between the government and the Gulen movement burst into the open in December, when corruption investigations targeting Erdogan and his inner circle became public, leading to the resignation of three cabinet ministers. Erdogan described those investigations, which have effectively been quashed, as part of a failed "coup attempt", casting nationwide protests against the government in the summer of 2013 as part of the same plot. The officers held in July were accused of concocting an investigation into an alleged terrorist group linked with Iran as a pretence to tap the phones of Erdogan, ministers and the country's top spy. The alleged terrorist investigation, which targeted 251 people, was dismissed due to a lack of evidence after a three-year inquiry. (Additional reporting by Humeyra Pamuk; Editing by Nick Tattersall and Hugh Lawson)