Turkey's state-run Turkish Airlines
fired more than 100 employees, including management and cabin crew, as
part of a purge at state institutions to root out supporters of an
abortive coup, Turkish media reported on Monday.
The
dismissals at the national carrier occurred late on Sunday after it was
determined the employees were linked to a religious movement President Tayyip Erdogan has said attempted to overthrow the government on July 15, Sabah newspaper said.
An official at Turkish Airlines, Europe's fourth-biggest carrier, declined to comment.
Other reports said the dismissals were due to "inefficiency."
Thelira.com, a financial-news website, said about 250 cabin crew were
dismissed, along with 100 management and administrative staff.
Aviation
news site Airporthaber.com said that among those let go was a deputy
chief executive responsible for the airline's financial affairs.
Authorities
have sacked, suspended or detained some 60,000 people, mainly
public-sector employees, after a failed coup by a small faction in the
military. They are accused of sympathising or belonging to a religious
group led by Fethullah Gulen, an Islamic preacher in self-imposed exile
in the United States.
Separately, landline operator Turk Telekom, which is 30 percent state-owned, sacked 198 people on Friday in "cooperation with the security forces"
and said some managers had been summoned by prosecutors for testimony
in connection with the coup investigation, according to e-mailed
statements.
Turkish
Airlines shares were up 2.83 percent at 5.08 lira on Monday, in line
with the main index. Turk Telekom outpaced the index, rising 3.59
percent to 6.06 lira.
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