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ANKARA: Ergenekon Seeking Disposal Of Stockpiled Grenades

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  • ANKARA: Ergenekon Seeking Disposal Of Stockpiled Grenades

    ERGENEKON SEEKING DISPOSAL OF STOCKPILED GRENADES

    Today's Zaman
    April 11 2008
    Turkey

    A criminal gang thought to have been carrying out preparation for
    the overthrow of the government is suspected of having amassed some
    8,000 grenades but appears to be trying to get rid of them, the Taraf
    daily reported yesterday.

    The daily, basing its story on police sources, reported that Ergenekon,
    a shadowy and powerful neo-nationalist gang suspected of being behind a
    number of politically motivated murders, including the assassination
    of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in 2007, was trying to get rid
    of its explosives and grenades in the face of increased raids and
    operations against its members.

    So far 47 suspects have been arrested as part of the Ergenekon
    investigation, launched after the police found a house full of guns
    and explosives in Ýstanbul last June. Those who have been arrested
    include retired generals and army officials; public figures such as
    journalists; mafia leaders including drug lords; and the previous
    suspects of a 1996 car crash in Susurluk that revealed that a police
    chief at the time had dealings with a mafia leader and a deputy,
    the chief of a Kurdish clan in the Southeast funded by the state to
    fight the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

    Police sources say they have reason to believe the Ergenekon gang
    returned some of the 8,000 grenades they had earlier obtained to
    their sources, but the exact number of returned grenades is unknown.

    The police say the initial investigation into five hand grenades
    seized at the Esenler bus station in Ýstanbul on Tuesday showed that
    the serial numbers of the hand grenades are identical to some on
    grenades previously connected with the Ergenekon organization.

    "Either the gang is trying to get rid of the explosives it has by
    doing this or its members are preparing to stage an attack out of
    frustration and panic," Taraf quoted a source as saying. A similar
    grenade seized at a McDonald's store in Kadýkoy, Ýstanbul, also
    confirms this suspicion.

    Meanwhile, an official with the police department said the group had
    tried to detonate the Mc Donald's grenade but failed to do so because
    of an incorrect set-up on a mobile phone-activated device to set off
    the bomb.

    --Boundary_(ID_boDLF09FwOVJYxc976XQDw)--
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