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Turkish nationalists charged with plotting: report

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  • Turkish nationalists charged with plotting: report

    Reuters
    Jan 27 2008


    Turkish nationalists charged with plotting: report
    Sat Jan 26, 2008 5:59pm EST

    ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkish authorities charged on Saturday 13
    ultra-nationalists, including retired army officers, with involvement
    in plans for a violent uprising against the government, Turkish media
    said.

    The court decision followed the arrests of dozens of people this week
    in a police investigation into a far-right group known as Ergenekon.
    Turkish media say the group had been plotting a series of bomb
    attacks and assassinations.

    Retired brigadier general Veli Kucuk, retired major Zekeriya Ozturk
    and lawyer Kemal Kerencsiz were among those facing charges of
    inciting people to armed revolt, private broadcaster CNN Turk said.

    Kerencsiz is well known in Turkey for prosecuting writers and
    journalists, including Nobel Literature Laureate Orhan Pamuk, under
    article 301 of the country's penal code that makes it a crime to
    insult "Turkishness".

    Officials have declined to comment on the Ergenekon case, which began
    with the seizure of explosives and weapons at a house in Umraniye,
    Istanbul, last summer.

    Turkish newspapers said this week the group had been planning to kill
    Pamuk, author of novels such as "Snow" and "My Name is Red", as well
    as several Kurdish politicians.

    The newspapers also said the group was preparing a series of bomb
    attacks aimed at fomenting chaos ahead of a coup in 2009 against
    Turkey's centre-right government, whose European Union-linked reforms
    are opposed by the ultra-nationalists.

    The Ergenekon group may have been behind the murder last January of
    Hrant Dink, a prominent Turkish Armenian journalist, outside his
    office in Istanbul, newspapers have quoted police sources as saying.

    Some commentators have seen in the Ergenekon case the workings of a
    "deep state", a phrase used to denote ultra-nationalists in the
    security forces and state bureaucracy who are ready to subvert the
    law for their own political ends.

    Police have been observing Ergenekon, which is named after a valley
    in Turkish nationalist mythology, for several years and have compiled
    a 7,000-page dossier on the group and its activities, newspapers say.

    (Reporting by Gareth Jones; Editing by Elizabeth Piper)
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