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ANKARA: 'Untouchables' nabbed in raid

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  • ANKARA: 'Untouchables' nabbed in raid

    Turkish Daily News, Turkey
    Jan 28 2008


    'Untouchables' nabbed in raid
    Monday, January 28, 2008


    A new chapter opens in the investigation into the 'Ergenekon' gang,
    which some claim is part of Turkey's deep state. 'The court decides
    that 13 suspects be arrested, among them Ret Gen Veli Küçük

    ISTANBUL - TDN with wire dispatches


    After a record amount of time in Istanbul's 13th Criminal Court,
    eight alleged members of the `Ergenekon' gang - including a former
    top military commander - were arrested at the beginning of the
    weekend on charges of `provoking armed rebellion against the
    government.' With Saturday's arrests the total number of arrested has
    risen to 13. Among those arrested is Ret. Brig. General Veli Küçük,
    the alleged founder of the Gendarmerie Intelligence Anti-Terror Unit
    (JÝTEM). Despite various allegations against him, Küçük has remained
    virtually untouchable for the last decade.

    The crackdown follows a promise by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdoðan to eradicate clandestine hard-line nationalist groups that
    allegedly target people they consider to be a threat to the country's
    unity, The Associated Press said in a report.

    Following a four-day police interrogation, the suspects were taken
    to court late Friday where they were interrogated by the prosecutor
    until 5 a.m. Saturday. They were then taken to appear in front of the
    judge by 5 p.m. on the same day, after which 13 of them, including
    Küçük, were arrested and imprisoned, according to newspaper reports
    yesterday.

    High-profile names:

    Those arrested include Ret. Col. Fikri Karadað, president of the
    `Kuvayi Milliye' (National Forces) Association, lawyer Kemal
    Kerinçsiz, the public relations representative of the Turkish
    Orthodox Church, Sevgi Erenerol, and alleged mafia boss Sami Hoþtan.

    Kerinçsiz gained notoriety for leading campaigns against prominent
    intellectuals including novelists Orhan Pamuk, Elif Þafak and
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was murdered in January
    2007.

    Among detainees released on Friday was columnist Güler Kömürcü of
    daily Akþam, a lawyer, Fuat Turgut who defended an alleged instigator
    in the Dink murder and Ali Yasak, an alleged crime boss.

    The suspects were all taken into custody after a police raid in
    Istanbul's Ümraniye district in June that uncovered dozens of hand
    grenades. The grenades were seized at the home of a retired,
    non-commissioned military officer.

    The suspects were `preparing to assassinate a leading figure,'
    according to press reports. Mass-circulation daily Hürriyet said
    Nobel literature prize laureate Orhan Pamuk was on the `hit list,'
    while other newspapers reported that pro-Kurdish politicians Leyla
    Zana and Ahmet Türk were also targets of the shadowy organization.

    Provoking a coup?:

    The gang `hoped' that the chaos after those murders would provoke a
    military coup that would topple the Justice and Development Party
    (AKP) government, according to various newspaper reports.
    Nationalists and ultra-nationalists accuse the government of having a
    hidden `Islamic agenda,' and for making too many concessions to the
    European Union.

    A court has issued a news blackout on the investigation into the
    gang.

    With the arrests Küçük became the third former - or actual - member
    of the powerful Turkish military to be imprisoned. Throughout the
    Republic's history only two other `pashas' have been arrested: The
    first one was General Mustafa Muðlalý, charged with ordering the
    killing of 32 Kurdish peasants who were caught smuggling goods from
    the Iranian border and accused of stealing livestock. The peasants
    were executed by a shooting squad on July 30, 1943. Muðlalý was tried
    at a military court three years later and was sentenced to 20 years
    of prison, but died in prison in 1951.

    The second `pasha' to be put behind bars was Admiral Ýlhami Erdil,
    who was arrested last year on charges of illegal enrichment.

    The Þemdinli bombing:

    Meanwhile, in an unusually harsh speech Saturday, a former
    lawmaker from the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP)
    pointed to the many unresolved murder cases in the southeast.

    `The real Ergenekon are those that have killed people in the
    [southeast] region with identity cards given by the state itself,'
    Mesut Deðer, a member of the CHP executive board, said during the
    party's district congress in Van, 1,250 kilometers east of Ankara.

    `In the Þemdinli case, the accused were set free,' Deðer was quoted
    as saying by the Doðan news agency, referring to another shadow case.
    `Now we see the start of the Ergenekon case. What is Ergenekon? They
    say it is defending the unity of the state. Are we aiming for
    something else? The real Ergenekon are those that have their
    signatures on many unsolved murders in this region,' he said.

    The Þemdinli case takes its name from Hakkari's Þemdinli town, some
    1,500 kilometers southeast of Ankara. On Nov. 9, 2005, a bookstore in
    the town belonging to a former member of the outlawed Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK) was bombed, leaving one person dead. Minutes
    after the attack locals caught the alleged criminals and handed them
    over to the police. The identities of the suspects created
    controversy, as two were active sergeants on duty and the third one
    was a former PKK confessor. On the same day, as CHP Hakkari deputy
    Esat Canan and a state prosecutor were mobilized to investigate the
    incident, they were fired upon and a second person was killed in this
    attack. Claiming clandestine state forces were on a killing spree,
    locals at various towns in Hakkari protested in the streets, and
    three more people were killed during clashes between the police and
    protesters.
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