
The six Turkish citizens were arrested in Kosovo last week at Turkey’s request over alleged links to schools financed by the Gülen movement, which Ankara blames for a failed 2016 coup.
On Friday, Kosovar Prime Minister Ramush Haradinaj fired his interior minister and country’s secret service chief for failing to inform him about the arrests.
Haradinaj, who described the arrests as a “mistake”, has ordered a separate investigation.
Avdullah Hoti, head of the lawmakers from the opposition party the Democratic League of Kosovo (LDK) that initiated the emergency session in the 120-seat parliament, said he was “shocked” by the arrests of the six, who are teachers and managers at schools.
“Instead of being interviewed by authorities in Pristina, they were urgently deported to Turkey,” Hoti said.
Ankara accuses the six of being recruiters for a network run by the US-based cleric Fethullah Gülen and said they had helped people accused of connections to the network to leave Turkey. Ankara blames Gülen and his movement for the coup attempt in 2016. Gülen denies involvement.
Human Rights Watch criticised the Kosovar authorities over the arrests, saying the six men “were sent to a country where they face a serious risk of torture”.
Speaking in a live television interview on Wednesday, Haradinaj said he had spoken to the United States and the European Union, its two main economic and political supporters, about the incident.
“I have assured the EU and Washington that this was a mistake and an accident and I have asked them for their understanding and help to fix this,” Haradinaj told private Dukagjini television.