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ANKARA: Stripped-Down Investigation Leads Nowhere

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  • ANKARA: Stripped-Down Investigation Leads Nowhere

    STRIPPED-DOWN INVESTIGATION LEADS NOWHERE
    Abdullah Bozkurt

    Today's Zaman
    April 20 2008
    Turkey

    On a cold November night in 1996, in a little-known place called
    Susurluk in southwestern Turkey, an armored Mercedes crashed into a
    truck, killing three of its four passengers -- members of Parliament --
    a senior police official and an ultra-nationalist fugitive.

    It was the first clear evidence that revealed what Turks call the
    "deep state," a network of clandestine connections between criminal
    gangs that have infiltrated Parliament, the military, the bureaucracy
    and the republic's security forces.

    Since then, a number of other scandals, most notably Å~^emdinli and
    Ergenekon, have been uncovered, confirming time and time again that
    notorious gangs were allowed to prosper from illegal activities such as
    drug trafficking, arms sale, bribery and extortion under the protective
    wings of corrupt, high-ranking personnel in the state apparatus. The
    investigative committees and commissions set up by Parliament, the
    chief legislative body representing the people's will, to look into
    allegations often stalled and hit roadblocks, usually rendering the
    cases ineffective.

    Scholars argue that there are structural problems in the Turkish
    Constitution and legal system hindering parliamentary commissions from
    fully exercising their investigative powers in the public's name. What
    is more is the lack of a fully established democratic understanding in
    practice as we see in Western democracies. Mehmet ElkatmıÅ~_, a former
    deputy who headed the parliamentary commission on the infamous Susurluk
    case, says, "I never fully understood why a commission acting under
    the directive of Parliament, the highest authority representing the
    people, couldn't follow its investigation wherever it leads." Speaking
    to Sunday's Zaman, he also said, "I was often frustrated and aggravated
    when the case didn't seem to be going anywhere."

    Investigative power, one of the most important non-legislative
    functions of the parliament in any democratic system, is somewhat
    curtailed in the Turkish Constitution. Article 98 simply says,
    "A parliamentary inquiry is an examination conducted to obtain
    information on a specific subject." Article 105 of the Parliament
    Internal Regulations specifies in detail the operating scope of such
    commissions. Accordingly, commissions have no power to investigate
    matters related to state or trade secrets. In contrast, the United
    States Congress has great leverage in oversight and investigations,
    even into secret and intelligence issues. "Generally speaking,
    the congressional power to investigate is extremely broad," says
    Frank Askin, a law professor and director of the Rutgers Law School
    Constitutional Litigation Clinic.

    Event though there is no express provision in the US Constitution to
    its effect, broad legislative authority to issue informational demands
    has been established unequivocally in Supreme Court rulings since it
    was first borrowed from the British Parliament. In many cases brought
    to the court, justices ruled that such powers were essential to the
    legislature's function and thus implied in Congress' legislative
    powers. Asked whether congressional committees can look into state
    or trade secrets, Mark J. Rozell, professor of public policy at
    George Mason University, responded, "Congress also has the power to
    investigate matters of state secrets, although the so-called state
    secrets privilege may and has been used to prevent the divulgence of
    information to Congress and even to the courts."

    In the Turkish case, however, there is an ambiguity as to what
    constitutes a state or trade secret and who arbitrates when the
    question arises. ElkatmıÅ~_ provides specific examples of cases where
    witnesses called to testify categorically refused to comply, citing
    secrecy concerns. "On one occasion the commission inquired about lost
    guns and the state secrecy clause was immediately put into play. On
    another occasion, we requested bank records belonging to notorious
    killer Mahmut Yıldırım, known as 'YeÅ~_il'; they told us they
    could not release the records due to trade secrets protection. We
    could have proceeded with closed sessions for matters involving
    state or trade secrets, just like in the West. But they just used the
    loopholes as a pretext to shield criminals and circumvent the will of
    Parliament." Closed hearings are common in the United States. Askin
    states "the US Congress will often agree to hold closed hearings into
    state secret issues."

    The last prominent case highlighting the problems in the operation
    of Turkish parliamentary commissions is that of the subcommittee
    established to investigate the murder of ethnic Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink in Ä°stanbul last year. In light of strong evidence
    that security forces were tipped off about the plot to kill Dink
    before the murder but did not act, the committee called high-ranking
    gendarmerie officers to testify, including former commander of the
    Trabzon Gendarmerie Command Col. Ali Oz, who earlier testified to the
    committee that he "received no intelligence about the plot." However
    officers did not show up on the day they were scheduled to testify in
    front of the committee, citing pending cases. ElkatmıÅ~_ recalled
    a similar case in Susurluk: Teoman Koman, then chief commander of
    the gendarmerie forces and former undersecretary of the National
    Intelligence Organization (MÄ°T), refused to testify and did not even
    bother to show up.

    Under current rules, parliamentary commissions do not have the power
    to compel witnesses to testify.

    Does the US Congress have the authority to extend subpoenas to
    civilian as well as military personnel? "Clearly yes," says Kevin
    R. C. Gutzman, the author of "The Politically Incorrect Guide to the
    Constitution." Speaking to Sunday's Zaman, Gutzman, also a history
    professor at Western Connecticut State University, laid out a possible
    scenario. "He [the witness] can assert his Fifth Amendment privilege
    [protection from self-incrimination] and then if Congress wants to
    make him testify anyway, it will have to first grant him some type
    of immunity from prosecution. This was done in relation to several
    of the Iran-Contra defendants." To "plead the Fifth" however,
    you still need to attend the hearing and swear an oath before the
    committee. Rozell also believes "Congress indeed has the right to
    investigate military matters and it does so without hesitation,"
    noting that "a committee also may call military people to testify
    and they would have no special exemption from appearing."

    The cases we see in Turkish parliamentary commissions are very
    peculiar, as some witnesses literally ignore summons to testify at
    the hearing. This is partly due to an absence of power on the part
    of parliamentary commissions to bring the witness to stand, unlike
    Congress's contempt power in the US. There is no penalty for a no-show
    and a commission is powerless without government backing and pressure
    on agencies. The US Congress issues contempt citations to witnesses who
    refuse to appear before committees, respond to questions and produce
    documents; continued refusal may lead to arrest warrants and jail.

    No-shows by military officers in the Dink subcommittee hearings
    sparked yet another controversy in Turkey. Does the pending case
    prevent witnesses from appearing before the committee? Citing Article
    138 of the Turkish Constitution, which prohibits the legislature among
    others from giving orders or instructions to courts or judges relating
    to the exercise of judicial power, the Turkish Gendarmerie General
    Command asked the local court in Trabzon if there was a conflicting
    issue with another ongoing case should the officers appear before the
    committee. ElkatmıÅ~_ believes this charge was made up to stonewall
    the investigation. He says: "Commissions do not judge people or issue
    orders. So there is no interference with the court system here. They
    simply collect information and compile a report and submit it to
    Parliament." In the meantime, wires reported on Thursday that the
    local court had allowed officers to appear before the committee.

    Pending legal cases do not affect the power of investigation and
    contempt in the US. Conflicts most often emerge when the president
    invokes executive privilege to prevent government employees from
    testifying. Askin points out: "Most of these confrontations get
    negotiated. The courts have been reluctant to get involved -- although
    the Supreme Court did order President [Richard] Nixon to turn over
    White House tape recordings during the Watergate investigation,
    which lead to the president's impeachment." Rozell stresses that "a
    presidential claim of executive privilege does not affect a contempt
    citation by Congress." Askin agrees, saying, "Congress actually has
    an inherent power to arrest those officials and lock them up in the
    capital basement until they testify -- but that is a power Congress
    has not been willing to enforce in almost a hundred years," he adds.

    ElkatmıÅ~_ wants concrete proposals to overhaul the procedure by
    which commissions and committees work in Parliament. "Some vague
    statements in the letter of the law need to be clarified and the
    commission ought to be empowered to be able to collect information
    effectively," he says. The former deputy's wish may come true as the
    government starts rolling out new reform packages intended to bring
    the Constitution and regulations in line with the EU legal system.

    --Boundary_(ID_aUCF95hrtXGYwRSRhQYIAg)--
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