Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
International

Two Canadians Among Those Sought By U.S. Authorities Over Attack On Protesters

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jun, 2017 12:53 PM
    WASHINGTON — Two Canadians are among more than a dozen people sought in connection with a violent attack on protesters during an official visit by Turkey's president in the U.S. capital last month.
     
     
    Police in Washington, D.C., say they have issued arrest warrants for Mahmut Sami Ellialti on charges of felony aggravated assault and felony assault with significant bodily injury, as well as for Ahmet Cengizham Dereci on charges of felony assault with significant bodily injury and misdemeanour assault or threatened assault in a menacing manner.
     
     
    They say the two are residents of Canada but it is not yet known whether they have Canadian citizenship.
     
     
    Also sought are nine Turkish security agents and three Turkish police officers, who face either misdemeanour or felony assault charges.
     
     
    In a news conference Thursday, District of Columbia Police Chief Peter Newsham urged those being sought and some still unidentified to surrender and face American justice, adding two people were arrested a day earlier in the case.
     
     
    The brawl, which exacerbated the already strained U.S.-Turkey relations, broke out as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrived May 16 at the Turkish ambassador's residence after a White House meeting with President Donald Trump.
     
     
    Nesham said video showed security guards and some Erdogan supporters attacking a small group of protesters. Nine people were hurt.
     
     
    He said many were being sought on assault charges, and other counts.
     
    Erdogan's security detail returned with him to Turkey after his visit, so it was unclear if any would face any immediate U.S. legal repercussions. However, they could end up being threatened with arrest if they return to the U.S. If any are still in the country, they could be expelled if Turkey refuses to waive diplomatic immunity.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Body Of Indian Techie Killed In US Brought Home

    Body Of Indian Techie Killed In US Brought Home
    The body of Indian software engineer Vamshi Reddy Mamidala, who was shot dead in the Us, was brought home on Friday.

    Body Of Indian Techie Killed In US Brought Home

    At Indian Restaurant In UK, Diners Were Mid-Meal When Cockroaches Shut It Down

    At Indian Restaurant In UK, Diners Were Mid-Meal When Cockroaches Shut It Down
    A resident of the district made us aware that a pest control company had been visiting Sands. 

    At Indian Restaurant In UK, Diners Were Mid-Meal When Cockroaches Shut It Down

    Al-Qaeda Using US Preoccupation With ISIS To Spread To India, Warns US Expert

    Al-Qaeda Using US Preoccupation With ISIS To Spread To India, Warns US Expert
    Al-Qaeda has used America's "preoccupation" with the ISIS to regain strength in South Asia and preparing to spread its ideology in India from its "home" in western Pakistan, top US lawmakers have warned. 

    Al-Qaeda Using US Preoccupation With ISIS To Spread To India, Warns US Expert

    10 Members Of Donald Trump's Advisory Commission Resign In US

    10 Members Of Donald Trump's Advisory Commission Resign In US
    We object to your portrayal of immigrants, refugees, people of color and people of various faiths as untrustworthy, threatening, and a drain on our nation

    10 Members Of Donald Trump's Advisory Commission Resign In US

    Sikh Man Gets Life Term For Brutally Killing Step-Grandfather In UK

    Sikh Man Gets Life Term For Brutally Killing Step-Grandfather In UK
      Sukhraj Singh Atwal, of Derby, was told it would be 20 years until he is eligible to apply for parole after a jury at at the Nottingham Crown Court found him guilty of murdering his step-grandfather Satnam Singh, the father of his mother's ex-husband

    Sikh Man Gets Life Term For Brutally Killing Step-Grandfather In UK

    Pakistan Army Claims 100 Terrorists Killed After Shrine Bombing

    Pakistan Army Claims 100 Terrorists Killed After Shrine Bombing
    Pakistan Army today claimed to have killed more than 100 suspected terrorists in retaliation to an ISIS suicide bombing at a crowded Sufi shrine in Sindh province that claimed 88 lives.

    Pakistan Army Claims 100 Terrorists Killed After Shrine Bombing