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ANKARA: Gov't, opposition face critical test over deep gangs

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  • ANKARA: Gov't, opposition face critical test over deep gangs

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 28 2008


    Gov't, opposition face critical test over deep gangs


    As the government seeks a consensus with the opposition Nationalist
    Movement Party (MHP) to solve the longstanding, controversial issue
    of women wearing headscarves at universities, Turkish security
    experts are complaining about lack of similar resolve by the
    political leadership in extending a strong backing to prosecutors in
    their latest attempts to unearth criminal gangs.

    "Mushrooming acts of organized crime in Turkey are one of the root
    causes of the country's existing economic and social problems. But so
    far I have not seen strong resolve displayed by the government in
    reaction to the latest operations against such gangs. The prosecutor
    who has so far done a successful job should not be left alone and
    should not share a similar fate as the Þemdinli prosecutor," said a
    Turkish terrorism expert told Today's Zaman.

    The ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party), together with
    parties represented in Parliament, should have already gotten
    together to debate the Turkish gang problems, parallel to the latest
    police crackdown against an ultra-nationalist group calling itself
    `Ergenekon,' the same expert recalled. But this has not been done so
    far, he added.

    Eight people including retired Maj. Gen. Veli Küçük; retired Col.
    Fikri Karadað; a former defendant of the Susurluk gang, Sami Hoþtan;
    and lawyer Kemal Kerinçsiz were arrested by an Ýstanbul court early
    on the morning of Jan. 27 over charges of inciting citizens to armed
    uprising against the government and setting up, being a member of and
    masterminding a terror group (that is, Ergenekon).

    The arrests came as part of a crackdown on an ultra-nationalist group
    that reportedly plotted to kill Nobel laureate novelist Orhan Pamuk
    and Kurdish activists.

    With the latest arrests, the total number of those put in jail has
    reached 13.

    The investigation into the alleged gang members was carried out
    behind the shield of a secrecy law that restricts media coverage.

    Küçük has been accused of organizing extra-judicial killings of Kurds
    in the 1990s, but never stood trial. His name was also implicated in
    the infamous Susurluk gang case back in the mid-1990s.

    Kerinçsiz, meanwhile, is known for having initiated legal proceedings
    against Pamuk and ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was
    killed last year.

    The latest operations came as part of an investigation that led to
    the discovery of hand grenades and bomb detonators in a house in
    Ýstanbul's Ümraniye district in June last year.

    The names of those rounded up in the latest Ergenekon operations were
    also implicated 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.

    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.

    Prosecutors should receive political and legal backing

    The fact that the latest operations against the Ergenekon gang
    resulted in the arrests of people who had earlier acted as though
    they were untouchables who could escape justice, has broken a myth in
    Turkey, stressed Sedat Laçiner, head of the Ankara-based
    International Strategic Research Organization (ISRO/USAK).

    Meanwhile, a senior Turkish security expert, speaking to Today's
    Zaman, stressed that for the continuation and success of the
    operations Parliament should display determination to the public and
    to the prosecutors and declare that gangs must be brought to justice.

    `This political leadership leg of the operations is still missing and
    that carries a danger that Turkey may miss another golden opportunity
    to put an end to the unlawful actions of those using the state in
    their acts of organized crime,' said the same source.

    The prosecutors should also be given a wide-ranging legal shield to
    conduct their investigations in depth. In many cases those implicated
    in investigations into organized crime are released due to lack of
    evidence, Turkish legal experts point out. This does not mean that
    those released were innocent but that existing laws hindered broad
    investigations.

    Former prosecutor allegedly works at a supermarket

    If strong political backing of the prosecutors in the latest
    operations does not emerge, they will also be left alone and might
    face a similar fate as that of former Van prosecutor Ferhat Sarýkaya,
    Turkish security experts warned.

    Sarýkaya was stripped of his all duties by the Supreme Board of
    Prosecutors and Judges (HSYK) in 2006 when he implicated the names of
    then Turkish Land Forces Commander Gen. Yaþar Büyükanýt, the current
    chief of the Turkish General Staff, as well as some other commanders
    in his indictment on the bomb attack carried out against a bookstore
    in November 2005 in the Þemdinli township in the Southeast.

    The two noncommissioned officers, who were initially given a 39-year
    prison sentence over a bomb attack by a civilian court, were released
    pending the outcome of the trial last year by a military court that
    their files were later transferred to. The higher court decision that
    ruled the trial be transferred to a military court had also ordered
    that the trial start from scratch, rendering any previously given
    sentences ineffective.

    While they have been released, former prosecutor Sarýkaya is reported
    to have been working at a supermarket owned by his father-in-law
    somewhere in Turkey.



    28.01.2008

    LALE SARIÝBRAHÝMOÐLU
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