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Turkey was in chaos in the early hours of Saturday morning
after an attempted coup left Turks, businesses, and international allies unsure of who was in charge of the country
Clashes between police loyal to President Erdogan and the faction of the military began on Friday night
and soon turned violent with loud explosions rocking the cities of Ankara and Istanbul and jets flying overhead
Police officers arrested soldiers trying to enter the presidential palace
the Anadolu News Agency reported as members of parliament hid in the parliament building
President Erdogan landed in Istanbul on his presidential plane just after 2 am local time
Earlier, he had appeared on television from an undisclosed location via a mobile phone video app
calling on citizens to come out on the streets to defeat the uprising
Military coups have toppled Turkish governments at least three times since 1960
On Friday night, a previously unknown group calling itself the Council for Peace in the Homeland said it had taken over
to reinstate constitutional order, human rights and freedoms
the rule of law, and the general security that was damaged
Mr. Erdgogan and others in his government blamed Fethullah Gulen, a US-based preacher who was once his ally
Those spokesmen for Mr. Gulen denied that he was involved
Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson, Financial Times