Pastor Andrew Brunson Freed in Turkey, Trump Responds to Major Victory
American pastor Andrew Brunson has been granted his freedom in Turkey after a court convicted him of aiding terrorism but sentenced him only to time already served.
The Washington Post reported on Friday that the court ordered Brunson's immediate release, bringing an end to his ordeal that started in October 2016 when he was placed under arrest.
The pastor, who served at a Protestant church in Izmir for decades before his imprisonment, was charged with providing assistance to groups the Turkish government accused of being involved in a failed coup in 2016.
Brunson, alongside persecution watchdog groups around the world, insisted that he was innocent, and argued that he was being punished for his Christian faith.
Hours before Brunson's case resumed on Friday, U.S. officials said that a deal had finally been reached with Turkish authorities, following months of behind the scenes negotiations.
U.S. President Donald Trump strongly criticized his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan over Turkey's handling of the case, and accused the Turkish courts of holding an innocent man behind bars.
Erdogan insisted that Brunson had to be tried for his alleged involvement in terror schemes. The dispute between the two countries lead to economic penalties for Turkey.
Erdogan had also demanded that the U.S. extradite Islamic cleric Fethullah Gulen, who Turkey blames for the coup, in exchange for Brunson, but the U.S. administration refused the deal.
Trump issued a couple of short statements on Twitter immediately after news of the pastor's release broke, writing: "Working very hard on Pastor Brunson!"
In a follow-up tweet he added: "My thoughts and prayers are with Pastor Brunson, and we hope to have him safely back home soon!"
Aykan Erdemir, a former Turkish politician who served in the Grand National Assembly, provided several insights from the hearing on Friday on Twitter.
He said that four witnesses that at first testified against Brunson changed their accounts, and have since denied any knowledge of his alleged links to the failed coup.
"Of the four witnesses who earlier testified against Pastor #AndrewBrunson, one claims reading the allegations in the news, another says he was misunderstood by the judge, and the last two claim that they first heard the allegations from one another. What a travesty of justice!" Erdemir wrote.
Read more about pastor Andrew Brunson on The Christian Post.