A coup attempt in Turkey involves a substantial part of the military and "not just a few colonels", a European Union source monitoring events in the EU candidate country said on Friday.
"It looks like a
relatively well orchestrated coup by a substantial body of the military,
not just a few colonels," the source told Reuters.
"They've
got control of the airports and are expecting control over the TV
station imminently," the source said, shortly before state television
TRT broadcast a military declaration of martial law.
"They
control several strategic points in Istanbul. Given the scale of the
operation, it is difficult to imagine they will stop short of
prevailing," the source said.
Another European
diplomat said he was attending a dinner with the Turkish ambassador in a
European capital when they were interrupted by messages on their mobile
phones.
"This is clearly not some tinpot little
coup. The Turkish ambassador was clearly shocked and is taking it very
seriously," the diplomat told Reuters as the dinner party broke up.
Meanwhile,
access was restricted in Turkey on Friday to Facebook Inc, Twitter Inc
and Alphabet Inc's YouTube shortly after news that a military coup was
under way, according to two internet monitoring groups.
Turkey
Blocks, a group that monitors internet shutdowns in the country, and
Dyn, which monitors internet performance and traffic globally, both
reported it was difficult or impossible to access social media services
in Turkey.
The Turkish government under President Tayyip Erdogan
has repeatedly moved to block social media in periods of crisis and
political uncertainty. It was not immediately clear whether the
government or another actor ordered the block late Friday.
The government normally implements its internet restrictions through orders to Turkey's main internet service providers.
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