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ANKARA: Ergenekon Indictment To Be Included In Malatya Murders Case

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  • ANKARA: Ergenekon Indictment To Be Included In Malatya Murders Case

    ERGENEKON INDICTMENT TO BE INCLUDED IN MALATYA MURDERS CASE

    Today's Zaman
    Aug 22 2008
    Turkey

    The panel of judges hearing the murder trial of three missionaries
    killed at a Christian publishing house in the eastern province
    of Malatya last year has ruled to integrate the nearly 2,500-page
    indictment against Ergenekon, a gang accused of trying to topple the
    government by force, into the Malatya case.

    The tenth trial of the case was heard yesterday at the Malatya 13th
    High Criminal Court. The panel of judges announced that the indictment
    of Ergenekon and all of its associated folders would be requested on
    DVD and incorporated into the documents of the Malatya case.

    The decision marks an important step in the course of the trial,
    during which lawyers representing the victims' families have
    continuously insisted that the murder of the three Christians was
    not a simple hate crime, but something that goes much deeper. Recent
    evidence collected in the Ergenekon investigation also suggests that
    the brutal killings might have been organized by Ergenekon, which is
    suspected of a large number of murders and bombings aimed at creating
    chaos in the country to serve the organization's ultimate purpose of
    overthrowing the government.

    Speaking to journalists outside the courthouse, Erkan Yucel, a lawyer
    representing the victims' families, said they might consider in the
    near future requesting to merge the two trials.

    Also in yesterday's trial, jailed suspects Emre Gunaydın (19), Salih
    Gurler (20), Abuzer Yıldırım (19), Cuma Ozdemir (20) and Hamit
    Ceker (19) -- who were captured by the police at the crime scene on
    the day of the murders -- delivered additional defense statements,
    something they had requested at the previous hearing on July 3. All
    five denied the charges directed at them.

    After Gunaydın finished his defense statement, presiding judge Eray
    Gurtekin asked him whether he knew retired Gen. Levent Ersöz, who
    is being sought as part of the Ergenekon investigation, given that
    Gunaydın -- who spent time in the hospital after the brutal murders
    due to an injury he sustained as he tried to escape the scene --
    had written down the general's name on a piece of paper. Gunaydın
    denied knowing Ersöz, saying he had no recollection of taking down
    a note with the said general's name. The next trial was scheduled
    for Sept. 12, 2008.

    The investigation into Ergenekon, a behind-the-scenes network
    attempting to use social and psychological engineering to shape the
    country in accordance with its own ultra-nationalist ideology, began
    in 2007, when a house in Ä°stanbul's Umraniye district that was being
    used as an arms depot was discovered by police.

    Over the course of the investigation, the case was expanded to reveal
    elements of what in Turkey is called the deep state, finally proving
    the existence of the Ergenekon network, which is currently being
    accused of trying to incite chaos in order to trigger a coup against
    the government. The indictment, made public last month, indicates
    that Ergenekon was behind a series of political assassinations over
    the past two decades. The group is also suspected of being behind
    the murder of Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist killed by a
    teenager in 2007. Eighty-six suspects, 47 of whom are currently under
    arrest, are accused of having suspicious links to the gang.

    --Boundary_(ID_fS5bJ6esHlSFb9ekLrfZ4A)--
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