Current:Home > ContactTurkish minister says Somalia president’s son will return to face trial over fatal highway crash -StockPrime
Turkish minister says Somalia president’s son will return to face trial over fatal highway crash
View
Date:2025-04-16 22:53:36
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — The son of the president of Somalia will return to Turkey in the coming days to face trial over a fatal highway crash in Istanbul, Turkey’s justice minister said Thursday.
Yunus Emre Gocer, a 38-year-old motorcycle courier, was hit by a car driven by the Somalia president’s son, Mohammed Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, on a highway in Istanbul. The man died in a hospital six days later on Dec. 6.
Turkish authorities ordered the president’s son arrested and barred him from traveling abroad, but reports said Mohamud had already left Turkey by the time the warrant was issued. Turkey also launched an investigation into officials who conducted an initial investigation into the crash and reportedly allowed Mohamud to go free.
“We have held talks with Somali judicial authorities,” Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc told reporters. “It will be possible for the defendant to come to Turkey and to participate in the trial process in the coming days.”
“I have talked to the Somali justice minister and they look on the matter with good intentions,” Tunc said, adding that he hoped that the trial would open soon.
On Tuesday, Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud told The Associated Press that his 40-year-old son did not flee Turkey. He said he has advised him to go back and present himself to court. The younger Mohamud, who is a doctor, stayed at the scene of the crash and remained in Istanbul for several days afterward, the president said. He also extended his sympathy to Gocer’s family.
“I want to take this opportunity to send my condolences to the family, which I don’t know how to contact,” he said in Tuesday’s interview. “We share with them the grief of their loss. We are sorry for their loss.”
Turkey has built close ties with Somalia since 2011, when President Recep Tayyip Erdogan — then prime minister — visited the East African nation in a show of support as Somalis suffered from severe drought. Turkey has provided humanitarian aid, built infrastructure and opened a military base in Somalia where it has trained officers and police.
“I will do everything that I can to make sure that my son respects Turkish law and justice law, and stands in front of the courts in Turkey,” Somalia’s president said in the interview at United Nations headquarters in New York, where he presented a plan for his government to take over security from African Union troops and continue its fight against al-Shabab militants.
“Turkey is a brotherly country,” Mohamud said. “We respect the laws and the justice and the judicial system. As a president of Somalia, I will never allow anybody to violate this country’s judicial system.”
veryGood! (42227)
Related
- Trump's 'stop
- Why aren't there more union stories onscreen?
- Former NFL Player Alex Collins Dead at 28
- Family questions fatal police shooting of man after chase in Connecticut
- Sam Taylor
- Capture the best candid shots with bargains on Nikon cameras at B&H
- 13 injured when two airboats crash in central Florida, officials say
- See Blac Chyna's Sweet Mother-Daughter Photo With Dream Kardashian
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- 7-year-old South Carolina girl hit by stray shotgun pellet; father and son charged
Ranking
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Museum to honor Navajo Code Talkers is about $40 million shy of reality
- Magoo, Timbaland's former musical partner, dies at 50
- Videos put scrutiny on downed power lines as possible cause of deadly Maui wildfires
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- CBS News poll analysis looks at how Americans rate the economy through a partisan lens
- Michigan State University workers stumble across buried, 142-year-old campus observatory
- California judge who allegedly texted court staff that he shot his wife pleads not guilty
Recommendation
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
No stranger to tragedy, Maui Police Chief John Pelletier led response to 2017 Vegas massacre
Clarence Avant, record executive known as the Godfather of Black Music, dies at age 92
Peek inside this retired couple's semitrailer turned into a permanent home
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
See Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in Netflix's first 'Maestro' teaser trailer
Maui fires live updates: Officials to ID victims as residents warned not to return home
Judge blocks Internet Archive from sharing copyrighted books