Senior Turkish ruling party politician says third country cannot interfere in business between two other nations
A senior member of Turkey’s ruling party on Sunday accused the U.S. of interfering in trade ties, referring to the case of Reza Zarrab, a Turkish businessman in the U.S. awaiting trial.
Speaking at the opening of the Justice and Development (AK) Party’s new office in Gelibolu, Canakkale, Bülent Turan, the AK Party’s parliamentary group leader, said that a Turkish citizen had engaged in the gold trade with another country, and “this is the issue”.
“I would like to underline this, the man did exports,” Turan said.
“A third county says, ‘You can’t do’ that,” he added.
Turan said Turkey is not a state in the U.S. “We are the independent Republic of Turkey,” he said.
“We do our business and if we make a mistake, we account for it in [Turkish] court.
“A third country can’t interfere in trade between two countries,” Turan added.
Zarrab was arrested last year for alleged fraud and Iran sanctions-related charges.
Turkey recently launched a probe of U.S. prosecutors connected to the Zarrab case.
Istanbul prosecutors accused former U.S. Attorney for the southern district of New York Preet Bharara and Joon H. Kim, the district’s current acting attorney, of using information and documents from previous investigations in Turkey for an ongoing case in the U.S.
Bharara, who launched the probe into Zarrab, was fired on March 11, as part of a mass Trump administration expulsion of holdover U.S. attorneys.