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ANKARA: Court remains silent on deep state links of judge shooter

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  • ANKARA: Court remains silent on deep state links of judge shooter

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 15 2008


    Court remains silent on deep state links of judge shooter


    A court on Wednesday sentenced a lawyer to life in prison for killing
    a senior judge in 2006, but the suspect's links to a shadowy crime
    network with connections to the military were not mentioned in the
    ruling.


    In the May 2006 gun attack inside the Council of State, the country's
    top administrative court, attorney Alparslan Arslan killed one judge
    and wounded four others. Arslan had stated previously that he had
    acted in protest of a ban on the Muslim headscarf in schools and
    universities. The attack shocked Turkey and triggered mass secularist
    protests against the Justice and Development Party (AK Party).
    However, police investigations into another gang later suggest
    Arslan's attack was incited by people whose motives had little to do
    with religious concerns.
    During the trial Arslan had been quoted as saying that the aim of the
    attack was to punish the "shameful actions against God's religion,
    the Prophet and Muslims." He had also been quoted as saying that he
    planned to kill the then-president, Ahmet Necdet Sezer, a staunch
    defender of the secular order. However, the fundamentalist remarks
    seem to be part of a front, as another prosecutor's ongoing
    investigation into a crime gang called Ergenekon -- which was
    involved in a number of politically motivated attacks, including the
    murder of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink -- revealed connections to
    Arslan.

    Ergenekon, which was unearthed in police raids last month, is a
    neo-nationalist group with links to groups in the military and
    bureaucracy aiming to discredit the government and its efforts to
    boost freedoms in Turkey. Gangs like Ergenekon in Turkey are believed
    to operate as branches of a mechanism referred to as the "deep
    state," which takes illegal and often violent measures to shape the
    country to suit its own political interests and nationalistic
    sentiment.

    Arslan has also been charged with bombing the secularist newspaper
    Cumhuriyet. The hand grenade used in the attack was part of a batch
    produced by the state and was found in a house full of munitions and
    explosives in Ýstanbul. Plenty of other evidence documented by a
    prosecutor currently working on the Ergenekon investigation links the
    Dink murder, the Cumhuriyet attack and Arslan's attack on the Council
    of State to the group's plans to create chaos before a military
    takeover of the government planned for 2009.


    15.02.2008

    Today's Zaman Ýstanbul

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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