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Turkish Nationalists Accused Of Plotting Coup D'etat In 2009

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  • Turkish Nationalists Accused Of Plotting Coup D'etat In 2009

    TURKISH NATIONALISTS ACCUSED OF PLOTTING COUP D'ETAT IN 2009

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    28.01.2008 16:08 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ A large number of documents clearly showing the
    hierarchical structure of the group have also been seized in the
    recent operations. The organization's manifesto and even organizational
    charts showing the hierarchy of the group, future plans and lists of
    agencies the organization plans to infiltrate are among the documents
    Prosecutor Zekeriya Oz has already been through. According to a report
    from the Hurriyet daily, some members of the Ergenekon network were
    in the past active members of Hizbullah.

    The suspects detained in Tuesday's operation included Veli Kucuk,
    a retired major general who is also the alleged founder of an illegal
    intelligence unit in the gendarmerie, the existence of which is denied
    by officials; controversial ultranationalist lawyer Kemal Kerincsiz,
    who filed countless suits against Turkish writers and intellectuals
    who were at odds with Turkey's official policies; Fikret Karadag,
    a retired army colonel; Sevgi Erenerol, the press spokesperson for
    a group called the Turkish Orthodox Patriarchate; Guler Komurcu, a
    columnist for the Aksam daily; and Sami Hostan, a key figure in the
    Susurluk investigation. Ali Yasak, a well-known gangster linked to the
    figures in the Susurluk incident, was also detained in the operation.

    A police investigation into a neo-nationalist gang believed to be
    the extension of a clandestine network of groups with members in the
    armed forces has discovered that the group was plotting to stage a
    coup against the government in the year 2009 and that suspects so
    far apprehended are only the collaborators of the real plotters in
    the military, Turkish newspapers reported on Friday.

    The investigation into the gang, 33 of whose members were taken into
    police custody earlier this week as part of an investigation into an
    arms depot found in Istanbul in June of last year, has exposed solid
    links between an attack on the Council of State in 2006, threats and
    attacks against people accused of being unpatriotic and a 1996 car
    crash known as the Susurluk incident, which revealed links between
    a police chief, a convicted ultranationalist fugitive and a member
    of Parliament as well as links to plans of some groups in Turkey's
    powerful military to overthrow the government.

    The gang is a part of a structure named Ergenekon, declared a
    terrorist organization by the Istanbul Chief Prosecutor's Office,
    an aggregation of many groups of varying sizes, many of which have in
    their names adjectives such as "patriotic," "national," "nationalist,"
    "Kemalist" or "Ataturkist." Ergenekon is the name of a legend that
    describes how Turks came into existence.

    The investigation has found that the Ergenekon phenomenon,
    also referred to as Turkey's "deep state," stages attacks using
    "behind-the-scenes" paramilitary organizations to manipulate public
    opinion according its own political agenda.

    The investigation has so far found that the Ergenekon organization had
    plotted to kill Turkey's Nobel Prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk and
    other public figures to drag Turkey into chaos to create the perfect
    environment for a coup - not unlike the atmosphere of the pre-1980
    period, which ended with a violent military takeover - that was to be
    staged in 2009. Evidence so far also suggests that 700 kilograms of
    explosives found loaded on a van in Istanbul belonged to this gang,
    which is also supposed to have plotted the assassination of Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink, Turkish media reports.
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