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Turkish Ex-Generals Arrested As Rift Widens Between Pious Government

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  • Turkish Ex-Generals Arrested As Rift Widens Between Pious Government

    TURKISH EX-GENERALS ARRESTED AS RIFT WIDENS BETWEEN PIOUS GOVERNMENT AND SECULAR OPPONENTS

    Associated Press Worldstream
    July 1, 2008 Tuesday 1:43 PM GMT

    ISTANBUL Turkey

    Turkish police arrested two retired military generals suspected
    of plotting to topple the Islamic-rooted government and the top
    prosecutor laid out evidence against the ruling party as rifts in
    Turkish politics appeared to widen Tuesday.

    The country's senior prosecutor has brought a case against the
    Islamic-leaning Justice and Development Party of Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan accusing it of undermining the secular principles of
    the Turkish constitution.

    The party denies the claims that it is trying to impose religion
    on politics and society, and accuses its opponents of undermining
    democracy by plotting to overthrow the legitimately elected government.

    Dozens of people, including retired military officers, have previously
    been detained during the investigation against an alleged network of
    extreme nationalists called "Ergenekon."

    But former generals Hursit Tolon and Sener Eruygur, who were detained
    Tuesday, were the highest-ranking ex-soldiers to be arrested so far,
    private CNN-Turk television said. Eruygur was a major organizer in
    anti-government rallies last year, when hundreds of thousands protested
    what they considered government attempts to undermine secularism.

    Others detained Tuesday included the head of the chamber of trade in
    the Turkish capital, Ankara, and a journalist known to be a fierce
    critic of the government, CNN-Turk said.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said a total of 20 people were
    arrested and police were looking for four others.

    He denied that the police operation was politically motivated or
    designed to silence government critics, even though it came just
    before top prosecutor Abdurrahman Yalcinkaya discussed his case
    against Erdogan's party.

    "I think this was a step toward completion of the indictment. It's
    a step taken upon a decision by prosecutors," Erdogan said.

    The Justice and Development Party holds a comfortable majority in the
    Parliament, winning its second mandate last year after a monthslong
    confrontation with the secularist opposition backed by the judiciary
    and the military.

    In March, prosecutor Yalcinkaya asked the Constitutional Court to
    shut down the party and bar 71 people from politics for five years,
    including Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul. Erdogan and other
    party members have denied they have an Islamic agenda, citing reforms
    designed for entry into the European Union as proof.

    But Yalcinkaya reaffirmed his position on Tuesday that the ruling
    party is trying to corrode the secularist principles enshrined in the
    Constitution, Anatolia news agency reported. He appeared before the
    top court in a private session, arguing that there was a "clear and
    present" danger that the ruling party was seeking to impose Islamic
    law on Turkey.

    Turkish police launched simultaneous raids in at least three provinces
    hours before Yalcinkaya appeared in court, private Dogan news agency
    said.

    "It may not be a coincidence. Every time there is a development
    concerning the closure case, there is often a development concerning
    the Ergenekon case," said Volkan Aytar, an analyst with an
    Istanbul-based research center, TESEV.

    In January, a court charged eight people with trying to provoke an
    armed rebellion against the government. News reports said they were
    members of "Ergenekon" and were accused of plotting a series of bomb
    attacks and assassinations.

    The Ergenekon hit list reportedly included Nobel prize-winning novelist
    Orhan Pamuk, who has angered nationalists with his comments about the
    World War I-era killing of ethnic Armenians, and Kurdish leaders seen
    by many Turks as a threat to national sovereignty.

    Associated Press reporter Suzan Fraser in Ankara contributed to
    this report.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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