There's also agylenist in Mongolia, the American newspaper compares it to Kosovo

After Turkey grabbed today a citizen who was now living for 25 years in the prestigious American newspaper Monogoli, “New The York Times”, his kidnapping compared to what had happened in Kosovo in March of this year. The same actions of teachers' kidnappers, reports the New York Times, [...]
New York Times reports on the same actions of teachers' kidnappers, Veysel Akcay in Monogoli with what had happened in Kosovo. Some people in masks, car cars with fake license plates and a plane suspected of being Turkish Air Force.
This same year, the Turkish government accused six Turkish citizens who were expelled from Kosovo on March 29th, who allegedly had links to Gyleni, which has a major impact on the Balkans.
Kosovo Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj had said he had not authorised the invasion of Turks, until he had fired his interior minister and secret service chief with the appeal that they had been aware of the operation and did not inform him in advance, writes the New York Times.
A Turkish teacher in Monogli has been kidnapped and released again on Friday, in what appears to be the latest episode of Turkey's president's global campaign, Rexhep Tayyp Erdogan, to capture cleric's alleged allies, Fetullah Gylen, after he is accused of coup plot in Turkey in 2016.
The teacher, Veysel Akcay, director of an international school network who has lived in Mongolia for nearly 25 years had been kidnapped with the claim that there is no residence permit.
However, Mongol authorities indicated that after the family protest at the airport in the Mongol capital, the suspected Turkish plane had been launched without teacher Veysel Akcay.
The same scenario had occurred in Kosovo in March of this year, where six Turkish citizens were extradited, who are charged with links to “the Gylen” Movement, the Islamic movement which has gained support in the Balkans. /insander/











