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Lawyer Among 29 Held Over Murders

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  • Lawyer Among 29 Held Over Murders

    LAWYER AMONG 29 HELD OVER MURDERS

    The Irish Times
    February 2, 2008 Saturday

    TURKEY: Prosecutors claim to have unmasked a plot to engineer a coup
    by murdering dissidents, writes Nicholas Birch in Istanbul

    Turkish investigations into a gang suspected of a series of
    high-profile killings and a plot to murder Nobel Prize-winning novelist
    Orhan Pamuk broadened this week, in a crackdown some are comparing
    to the anti-Mafia operations in Italy in the 1990s.

    Twenty-nine people, including a retired general and a prominent lawyer,
    have now been charged by an Istanbul prosecutor with "provoking armed
    rebellion against the government". Their plan, allegedly, was to
    assassinate public intellectuals, Kurdish politicians, even military
    targets, as part of a campaign to destabilise Turkish society and
    force military intervention.

    Dubbed "Ergenekon" by the Turkish press, the plotters' target date
    was in 2009. But after two years of increasing social tensions
    that culminated in army coup threats in April 2007, the group
    already seems to have a lot to account for. One of the men charged
    is Alparslan Arslan, currently on trial for the May 2006 murder of
    a judge at the High Court in Ankara. The attack on this secularist
    bastion triggered a backlash that culminated in last spring's massive
    secular demonstrations.

    The judge's death was blamed at the time on extremist Islamists. Yet
    while Arslan himself appears to be religious-minded, many of those
    behind him are secular-minded, self-styled patriots.

    It's a mix Turks call "the Red Apple coalition", a counter-intuitive
    collaboration based on rabid nationalism and a determination to block
    Turkey's path from authoritarianism to full democracy.

    Unsurprisingly, evidence linking Ergenekon to the murder of Hrant Dink,
    a mould-breaking Armenian-Turkish journalist whose assassination last
    January sparked deep social polarisation, is mounting fast.

    One of those arrested last week is Kemal Kerincsiz, the lawyer who
    opened dozens of cases against dissident intellectuals including Dink
    and Pamuk.

    A key suspect, meanwhile, is retired general Veli Kucuk, whose
    presence at Dink's trial, Dink later wrote, convinced him the death
    threats he was getting were serious. Alleged founder of a shadowy
    military police intelligence unit suspected of the murders of dozens
    of Kurdish activists in the 1990s, Kucuk also has strong links to
    Trabzon, the home town of Dink's killers.

    "He recently set up a security company there, and owns a local
    magazine," explains Belma Akcura, an investigative journalist whose
    book on state-mafia links was published last year. "Who writes for
    the magazine? A retired colonel linked to the nationalist group Dink's
    killers frequented."

    Akcura points to another of the bizarre coincidences piling up around
    the Ergenekon case: the High Court gunman and the Trabzon man suspected
    of masterminding the Dink murder attended the same secondary school
    in the eastern city of Elazig.

    Kucuk rose to notoriety in 1997 when it turned out he was the last
    man to talk to a convicted nationalist multi-murderer who died when
    a car carrying a police chief and a pro-state Kurdish MP crashed at
    high speed. Dubbed "Susurluk", the ensuing scandal shed a grim light
    on the Turkish state's dabbling in organised crime.

    For many, Kucuk's presence in Ergenekon proves the gang is part of the
    "Deep State", a shadowy nexus of politicians, civilian and military
    bureaucrats and mafia many believe tries to twist Turkish society to
    its own anti-democratic agenda.

    Back in 1997, the then prime minister blocked a parliamentary
    commission's demand that Kucuk give evidence. The army promoted him
    shortly afterwards. Some see his arrest now as evidence that Turkey
    is getting better.

    "It's early days, but I'm optimistic we're seeing signs of a
    fundamental change in the balance of power between the elected
    government and the state," says Alper Gormus, editor of a magazine
    that was shut last year after it revealed a top admiral's plans for
    a military coup.

    Others point out that Kucuk was then an active officer. Now he's not.

    "What we have here is a bunch of retired men trying to use the
    influence they once had to their own ends," says Fehmi Koru, a
    prominent columnist who was on the gang's hit-list.

    Most analysts think the real crunch will come when magistrates move
    against acting officers whose internet chats on the finer points of
    Ergenekon strategy began leaking into the press this week.

    The allegations brought an uncharacteristially cautious public
    statement on Wednesday from Turkey's chief of staff. "The Turkish
    armed forces are not a criminal organisation," Yasar Buyukanit said.

    "Those who commit an offence as army members will be tried in court
    and punished."

    In an investigation whose success ultimately depends on government
    determination, analysts are divided as to how far it will go. Some
    think the army - whose coup threats last year served only to boost
    the government's crushing electoral victory - will think twice before
    intervening again.

    Others think the government's backing for the investigation has more
    to do with short-term power struggles with the army than any deep
    desire to cleanse the state of its links to crime.

    For Belma Akcura, the government's limitations became evident in
    its lack of interest in following up the Dink murder, an ongoing
    investigation it has no vested interests in.

    "I've looked into hundreds of political murder cases, and in all of
    them all you get at the end are the footsoldiers, never the top of
    the pyramid," she says. "To have the will to get to the top, you have
    to believe in law, in democracy. These people do not."

    Reuters adds: The Turkish government's plans to allow female students
    to wear the Muslim headscarf at university will provoke campus
    chaos and street violence and end up destroying the secular state,
    university rectors said yesterday.

    "After such changes in the constitution and the law, the republic of
    Turkey would inevitably turn into a religious state," Mustafa Akaydin,
    head of Turkey's inter-university council, said to loud applause from
    dozens of academics. "We are worried that the universities will be
    plunged into chaos . . . Universities are the venue for knowledge, not
    for [ religious] faith," he said, reading out a statement unanimously
    approved by the rectors after an emergency meeting in Ankara.

    Some professors chanted, "Turkey is secular and will remain secular",
    and held up a banner that read: "Enough already, wake up! Let's protect
    the principles and revolution of Ataturk and the secular republic!"
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