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ANKARA: General, lawyer jailed for murder plots in Turkey: Anatolia

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  • ANKARA: General, lawyer jailed for murder plots in Turkey: Anatolia

    Turkish Press, Turkey
    Jan 27 2008


    General, lawyer jailed for murder plots in Turkey: Anatolia
    Published: 1/26/2008


    ISTANBUL - A retired Turkish general and a high-profile lawyer were
    jailed pending trial Saturday as part of a crackdown on an
    ultra-nationalist group that reportedly plotted to kill Nobel
    laureate novelist Orhan Pamuk and Kurdish activists, Anatolia news
    agency reported.
    It was not immediately known what charges the suspects face. The
    probe is being carried out behind the shield of a secrecy law that
    restricts media coverage.

    Retired general Veli Kucuk has been accused of organising
    extra-judicial killings of Kurds in the 1990s, but never stood trial.


    Attorney Kemal Kerincsiz, meanwhile, is notorious for having
    initiated legal proceedings against Pamuk and ethnic Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink, who was killed last year, as well as other
    intellectuals who contested the official line on the World War I
    Ottoman era massacres of Armenians.

    The two were arrested along with six other suspects, among them a
    retired colonel and a well-known gangster, Anatolia reported.

    The arrests bring to 13 the number of suspects remanded in custody
    after the police rounded up more than 30 people this week as part of
    a probe into the discovery of hand grenades and bomb detonators in a
    house in Istanbul in June.

    Media reports said the suspects planned to assassinate Pamuk, the
    winner of the 2006 Nobel literature prize, prominent journalist Fehmi
    Koru and Kurdish politicians Leyla Zana, Osman Baydemir and Ahmet
    Turk.

    Police are also reportedly investigating whether the suspects were
    involved in several politically motivated attacks that shocked Turkey
    over the past two years, including the murders of Dink, Italian
    Catholic priest Andrea Santoro and a senior judge.

    Dink's family has raised vocal accusations that the journalist's
    self-confessed teenage assassin was incited by people who remain at
    large and enjoyed the protection of some members of the security
    forces.

    The media have linked the suspects to the "deep state" -- a term used
    to describe members of the security forces who act outside the law
    for subversive purposes or to preserve what they consider Turkey's
    best interests.
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