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| - The Turkish parliament on Thursday stripped three opposition lawmakers of their jobs, triggering furious charges that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government is seeking to further consolidate authoritarian rule. The parliament controlled by Erdogan's AKP party barred an MP from the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) and two others from the pro-Kurdish Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) from serving in the assembly, the parties said. The move lifts their parliamentary immunity, paving the way for their imprisonment as courts have previously sentenced them on espionage or terror-related charges. HDP MPs Musa Farisogullari and Leyla Guven said on Twitter they were detained hours after the removal of their parliamentary mandates. Farisogullari said he was taken into police custody on the way from Diyarbakir in southeast Turkey to Ankara where he planned to visit the party headquarters. Guven, who launched a hunger strike in 2018 to end jailed Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan's isolation, said she was also taken into custody in Diyarbakir. "Resistance means living," she tweeted in Kurdish. Earlier the session in parliament was tense and the move to ouster the MPs provoked uproar as opposition MPs banged their fists on their desks and called for unity against what they described as "fascism." CHP leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu denounced the move against his party's MP Enis Berberoglu as yet another step in Erdogan's continuing crackdown on the opposition since the failed 2016 coup against the president. "We will keep up with the struggle for democracy in order to restore justice, rights and law," Kilicdaroglu tweeted. The Kurdish HDP party tweeted to denounce the ouster of its MPs Guven and Farisogullari as an "unlawful step," using the hashtag #MeclisteDarbeVar (There is a coup in the parliament). "Guven & Farisogullari represent the will of millions. Revocation of their parliamentary seats will not intimidate us and our peoples!" the party said. In 2019, the Supreme Court of Appeals upheld the prison sentences given to the pair on charges of membership of the outlawed Kurdish militants listed as a terror group by Ankara and its Western allies. The government accuses the HDP of links to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) -- an armed group which has waged a bloody insurgency against the state since 1984. CHP's Berberoglu was allowed to walk free in 2018 following 16 months in an Istanbul prison after winning election to parliament in the June 24, 2018 snap election but will now return to complete his sentence. "It is not a surprise decision for me," Berberoglu said during a visit to the CHP headquarters. "I will surrender to the prison in the coming days in order to serve the remaining 18 month-sentence." Ruling party lawmaker Cahit Ozkan dismissed the accusations against his AKP. He said the ouster of the three MPs were in line with parliamentary procedure, saying there were court verdicts against them despite pending appeals at the constitutional court. "The constitutional court cannot prevent parliament from making such a decision," he said. mb-fo/lc
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