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  • Ankara: Ergenekon Indictment Reopens Gendarmerie Major's Murder Case

    ERGENEKON INDICTMENT REOPENS GENDARMERIE MAJOR'S MURDER CASE

    Today's Zaman
    13 August 2008, Wednesday
    Turkey

    An investigation into Ergenenekon, a shadowy network whose
    suspected members are accused of having planned and staged attacks
    and assassinations for the ultimate aim of toppling the government,
    has prompted state prosecutors to take a fresh look at the murder of
    a gendarmerie major, a case closed as unresolved 15 years ago.

    Documents and evidence seized in raids and searches in the homes
    and offices of suspects during the Ergenekon investigation -- which
    started in the summer of 2007 and has expanded to its current state
    where at least 80 people are being indicted, including retired army
    members -- have shown that the group was linked to the assassination
    of Cem Ersever, a gendarmerie commander killed in November 1993 after
    being kidnapped.

    The Ankara Chief Prosecutor's Office, which had investigated the
    Erserver murder last May, requested and received from the Ä°stanbul
    Prosecutor's Office files on Ersever, which were found during a
    search in the home of retired Gen. Veli Kucuk, a major suspect in the
    investigation thought to have masterminded many of the organization's
    politically motivated attacks.

    Documents seized in the Ergenekon investigation and submitted to a
    court of law last month in a 2,455 page indictment, plus more than
    400 folders of evidence supporting accusations, shed light on most
    of Turkey's unresolved murder cases -- mostly assassinations of
    journalists, high-ranking security officials and academics -- that
    occurred in the 1990s. Files found on JÄ°TEM -- a secret intelligence
    agency with no legitimate basis and the existence of which has been
    denied officially despite substantial evidence to the contrary --
    include information that might be key to solving the Ersever case,
    even after 15 years.

    Ersever's secret archive

    Ersever was a former major who left the army after Gendarmerie
    Commander Gen. Etref Bitlis was killed in a suspicious plane
    crash. Ersever, in a confession made to the press after he left the
    army, informed the public of figures who would later become notorious
    in Turkey after a car crash in 1996 in the town of Susurluk. The
    car crash -- in which a police chief and an internationally sought
    criminal were killed, and a deputy who had led a southeastern Kurdish
    clan armed by the state against the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)
    was seriously injured -- confirmed for the first time the Turkish
    public's suspicions of a "deep state."

    Ersever's confessions were later compiled in a number of books by
    author Soner Yalcın. Before his assassination, the major also said
    he had been in charge of JÄ°TEM's southeastern operations.

    Ersever's body was found in Ankara on Nov. 4, 1993. His girlfriend
    and right-hand man were also killed, and his archive disappeared.

    The archive, which had been lost for more than a decade and reappeared
    in Kucuk's house, might also shed light on the unlawful activities
    Ersever did for JÄ°TEM.

    Prosecutor investigates PKK Ergenekon link

    Ergenekon prosecutors have demanded records of all contacts the jailed
    founder and leader of the separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)
    has had during his stay as the sole inmate of the İmralı prison
    island. A notice discovered by the press this week, addressing the
    Bursa Prosecutor's Office and written on June 27, demands the records
    of all of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan's contacts.

    In the response note, Bursa prosecutors agree to share records of
    Ocalan meetings with his lawyers but will withhold records of his
    conversations with other persons, saying these should be requested
    directly from the İmralı Prison administration.

    The news that the prosecutors have already acted comes one day
    after the Vatan newspaper reported that Ocalan said he has important
    information to share with the prosecution. The notice shows that the
    prosecutors have acted before him. The prosecutors have yet to decide
    whether to call Ocalan to testify as a witness.

    The 2,455 page indictment backed by more than 400 folders of evidence
    against the suspected Ergenekon members, who include retired senior
    army generals, academics, civil society representatives, journalists
    and mafia leaders, draws links between the PKK and the Ergenekon
    network. The indictment presents evidence and witness accounts clearly
    suggesting that the members of the organization who formerly worked
    in various intelligence units of the state had used the PKK to shift
    public opinion in favor of their agenda, which aimed to eventually
    trigger a military coup.

    Malatya, Dink and Santoro murders

    The investigation has also uncovered evidence linking Ergenekon
    to the assassination of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in
    January of last year, the killing of Italian priest Father Andrea
    Santoro in February 2006 and the brutal murders of three Christians,
    one a German national, killed in the province of Malatya in April
    of last year. In all three cases, the perpetrators were uneducated,
    violent, ultranationalist young men. Lawyers and prosecutors have
    claimed obstruction of evidence on the part of security officials in
    the Dink and Malatya murder trials.

    The Ergenekon indictment, prepared by public prosecutors Zekeriya Oz,
    Mehmet Ali Pekguzel and Nihat TaÅ~_kın, also offers evidence linking
    the group to the murder of a secularist judge in a shooting in 2006,
    the attempted murder of former Higher Education Board (YOK) President
    Erdogan Tezic and a hand grenade attack at the Cumhuriyet daily,
    known for its staunch secularism.

    "Given the purpose and consequences of these attacks, it is obvious
    that they were orchestrated from a single center, seeking to create
    chaos, anarchy, terror, disorder and conflict in Turkey and embarrass
    the nation before the international community," the prosecutors
    wrote. They noted, however, that they had failed to offer enough
    evidence from the Dink, Malatya and Santoro murders due to the
    structure of the Ergenekon organization, which is made up of cells
    that are unaware of and unconnected to each other.

    A master plan to create the ideal woman

    One of the most curious documents seized during the Ergenekon operation
    is a file titled the "Turkish Woman Master Plan," depicting the ideal
    Turkish woman in the minds of the organization's administrators and
    methods to make the women in society closer to this ideal prototype.

    The plan, which also lists the negative characteristics of Turkish
    women, says: "They are socially passive. They live in the past and
    have no expectations or confidence for the future." However, it also
    praises Turkish women, using almost literary language for their love
    of the motherland.

    The plan to create the ideal woman makes the following observations
    about Turkish women: "The literacy rate of our women is very low. They
    have no economic independence. They have accepted poverty as an
    act of fate, and their personalities have been suppressed. They
    have no confidence. They are afraid to think, and they are in
    a state of laziness of thought. They are inclined to believe in
    superstitions. They are ineffective inside the family. They have
    no knowledge of our Central Asian roots. The properties of our
    matriarchal family structural have been erased from their minds. Their
    personalities are mostly cowardly or they don't care about others. They
    are under sexual oppression. Their religious preferences are under
    the influence of men."

    The plan, which seeks to bring the Turkish woman to an effective
    position in the "social, political, economic, cultural and educational"
    spheres, also went into the indictment as proof of Ergenekon's social
    engineering plans.

    Ergenekon phone transcripts reveal secrets

    Meanwhile, transcripts of dozens of Ergenekon suspects monitored
    by the prosecution for months during the investigation have been
    revealing interesting secrets. Records of phone conversations of
    Ergenekon suspect Ä°lhan Selcuk, publisher and chief columnist of the
    staunchly secularist Cumhuriyet daily, have already made public the
    results of a survey showing that Cumhuriyet's readers did not read
    the daily's columnists, contrary to what had been published previously.

    In the transcript, Selcuk tells the person on the other end of the
    line that a survey has shown that nobody is interested in their
    columnists, but that he will order a false report prepared showing
    the opposite of this. In another conversation, he praises an Ak?am
    columnist for an anti-religion article, saying, "Yes he is smart,
    but he is a homosexual."

    --Boundary_(ID_9gjJyXLqi7emCRCN 20lVGw)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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