"Today I will give our friends instructions to freeze the assets in Turkey of
the American justice and interior ministers, if they have any (such assets),”
Erdogan said in a televised speech.
He did not specify to which members of the US administration he was referring.
The US attorney general is Jeff Sessions and while the United States does not
have an interior ministry similar to Turkey, the Secretary of the Interior is
Ryan Zinke and Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security is Kirstjen
Nielsen.
Erdogan’s announcement was a tit-for-tat response to Washington’s decision to
impose sanctions on Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu and Justice
Minister Abdulhamit Gul over the detention for the last two years of pastor
Andrew Brunson on terror-related charges.
The sanctions freeze any property or assets on US soil held by the two
ministers, and bar US citizens from doing business with them.
Both Turkish ministers have denied having any assets in the US and it is highly
unlikely the American officials would have assets in Turkey, making the
sanctions largely symbolic.
Meanwhile, Erdogan appeared to indicate that he did not want the crisis to
escalate further to full-scale economic sanctions.
"We don’t want to be a party to lose-lose games. Moving political and judicial
disputes into an economic dimension will be harmful for both sides,” Erdogan
said.
Brunson was moved to house arrest last week following nearly two years in jail
on terror-related charges but the change only increased tensions.
President Donald Trump and his Vice President Mike Pence, who shares Brunson’s
evangelical Christian faith, have made his release and return back to his family
in the United States a priority.
The US Treasury implemented the sanctions against the Turkish ministers under
the 2016 Global Magnitsky Act named after Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who
died in a Moscow jail, and which allows the US to sanction foreign officials
implicated in rights abuses.
Source: almanar