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ANKARA: Wanted: Backers of Ergenekon

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  • ANKARA: Wanted: Backers of Ergenekon

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 28 2008


    Wanted: Backers of Ergenekon


    Thirteen people in the deep-state linked Ergenekon organization were
    arrested and jailed by order of a court on Saturday after being
    charged with inciting people to revolt, but many commentators say it
    remains unclear whether the investigation will go any deeper.

    The 13 included retired Maj. Gen. Veli Küçük and retired Col. Fikri
    Karadað. The Ergenekon group had been the top story of all of
    Turkey's newspapers last week after it was uncovered as the
    organization apparently has strong ties to the deep state -- a phrase
    used to describe a phenomenon in which illegal groups in the security
    forces and state bureaucracy take the law into their own hands to
    serve their own political ends. Küçük is the first of his rank to be
    arrested by a civilian court. There are many faces currently in the
    bureaucracy and the military behind the faces in Ergenekon, and they
    should be identified, demanded many analysts and newspapers over the
    weekend.

    The court decision followed the arrests of dozens of people last week
    in a police investigation into an ultra-nationalist group known as
    Ergenekon. The investigation has shown that the group had been
    planning to kill Nobel Prize winning author Orhan Pamuk and Todays's
    Zaman columnist Fehmi Koru as well as several Kurdish politicians.
    The nine people in custody under suspicion of membership in the
    Ergenekon organization -- part of a shadowy network with apparent
    inside links to the military, bureaucracy and some other state
    agencies thought to be responsible for assassinations of certain
    public figures, including Armenian journalist Hrant Dink -- were on
    Saturday taken to the Ýstanbul courthouse located in Beþiktaþ.
    Officials have declined to comment on the case, which began last
    summer with the seizure of explosives and weapons at a house in the
    Ümraniye district of Ýstanbul.

    The suspects arrested by the court on Saturday included Küçük, a
    retired general who is also the alleged founder of a secret
    intelligence unit in the gendarmerie, the existence of which is
    denied by officials; controversial ultranationalist lawyer Kemal
    Kerinçsiz, who filed countless suits against Turkish writers and
    intellectuals who were at odds with Turkey's official policies;
    Fikret Karadað, a retired army colonel who also heads the Association
    for the Union of Patriotic Forces (VKGB); Sevgi Erenerol, the press
    spokesperson for a group called the Turkish Orthodox Patriarchate;
    Sami Hoþtan, a key figure in the Susurluk investigation; Hüseyin
    Görüm; Hüseyin Gazi Oðuz; and Oðuz Alparsalan Abdülkadir. The
    arrested are facing charges of inciting people to armed revolt
    against the government.

    The Susurluk investigation was launched in 1996 after a car crash
    near the small town of Susurluk that uncovered links between a police
    chief, a convicted fugitive, who was an ultranationalist, and a
    deputy. At the time hundreds of thousands of ordinary citizens across
    the nation had protested, turning their lights out for a moment at 9
    p.m. and calling on authorities to put an end to the shady insider
    gangs known as the "deep state."

    Güler Kömürcü, a columnist for the Akþam daily who was taken into
    custody in the operation last week, was released Saturday by the
    court, but she remains banned from traveling abroad.

    The suspects were taken out of the courthouse on Saturday under tight
    security. Photojournalists were not allowed to take any pictures.

    Meanwhile, Hüseyin Görüm, one of the suspects, yelled out, `Kuvayý
    Milliye 1919 won!' The phrase is a reference to the right-wing Kuvayý
    Milliye (National Forces) movement that started in 1919 to purge
    Turkey of invading Western powers and resulted in the establishment
    of the Republic of Turkey.

    Two more detained

    Retired Maj. Zekeriya Öztürk, Kahraman Þahin, Erol Ölmez, Erkut Ersoy
    and Muhammet Yüce were also arrested.

    Twelve people, including the lawyer of a Dink murder suspect, and Ali
    Yasak, also known as Drej Ali, another figure in the Susurluk
    investigation, were released after their initial interrogation.

    The investigation has so far revealed that the group was preparing a
    series of bomb attacks aimed at fomenting chaos ahead of a coup in
    2009 against Turkey's center-right government, whose European
    Union-linked reforms are opposed by ultra-nationalists.

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

    Police have been observing Ergenekon -- the name of an epic story in
    nationalist mythology explaining how the Turks came into being -- for
    several years and have compiled a 7,000-page dossier on the group and
    its activities, newspapers say.

    Gang meetings in church

    The Turkish Orthodox Patriarchate, the Taraf daily wrote on Sunday,
    was the meeting place of the group. The patriarchate's spokesperson,
    Sevgi Erenerol, hosted the gang's meetings in the organization's
    `church.' The daily noted that the Turkish Orthodox Patriarchate was
    founded in 1924 to break the influence of the Fener Greek
    Patriarchate. Although it has no followers, it has become an
    important part of the `deep state,' as it was intended.

    `As a church, we have regular meetings with the National Security
    Agency (MÝT),' said Selçuk Erenerol, the third patriarch who is also
    the father of Sevgi Erenerol. The group owns two other churches, but
    none of them has a congregation.

    Many of those arrested on Saturday, including Küçük, Kerinçsiz and
    Karadað, had regular meetings at the church and gave their orders
    from there.

    Some of the gang members are members of the Church of Scientology,
    some newspapers reported.

    Links with the PKK

    Meanwhile the Hürriyet daily on Sunday wrote that the group was
    planning to use two members of the Kurdistan Freedom Falcons (TAK),
    known as the `deep' extension of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers'
    Party (PKK), in a bombing. Maps of the plot showed that the group was
    planning to blow up a bridge along a highway where the air force and
    the navy headquarters are located.

    The group also had plans to assassinate Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdoðan, sources speaking to Hürriyet claimed.

    Who is behind Ergenekon?

    The name of Küçük first appeared on Nov. 3, 1996, wrote Radikal
    columnist Murat Yetkin on Sunday. `However, neither that date nor
    Veli Küçük marks the start of the organizations of paramilitary
    militia.' He said if the allegations that Ergenekon was a group
    trying to create chaos through attacks to enable coup planners inside
    the military to overthrow the government, then it is necessary to
    reach the individuals at the `bottom of the iceberg.'

    Yeni Þafak columnist Ali Bayramoðlu, known for his keen knowledge of
    Turkey's political history, on Friday wrote: `One looking for
    Ergenekon need not go too far. This is the story of Ergenekon -- the
    Turkish Gladio -- from the assassination of [journalist] Abdi Ýpekçi
    [in 1979] to `the massacre of March 16' [in 1978, when seven students
    at an Ýstanbul university were killed in a bomb attack], then peaking
    in Susurluk and possibly involved in the Council of State shooting.'

    A senior judge was shot dead in an attack at the Council of State in
    2006. The attacker was found to have links to shady networks similar
    to the Ergenekon gang.

    Gladio was an Italian organization founded by NATO in the post World
    War I period to perform illegal, behind-the-scenes operations to
    counter the Soviet threat. Similar organizations were founded in many
    countries in the `50s. Many ended up doing the `dirty work' of their
    own secret services.

    28.01.2008

    Today's Zaman Ýstanbul
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