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ANKARA: Ergenekon Indictment To Be Revealed, No Disclosure Of Conten

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  • ANKARA: Ergenekon Indictment To Be Revealed, No Disclosure Of Conten

    ERGENEKON INDICTMENT TO BE REVEALED, NO DISCLOSURE OF CONTENT PROMISED

    Turkish Daily News
    July 14 2008
    Turkey

    Istanbul's chief public prosecutor is expected to reveal the Ergenekon
    indictment, a year after the beginning of the investigation and several
    postponements. The prosecutor maintains he will not delve into details
    of the content but will share information mostly relevant to content
    of the indictment. Prosecutors who prepared the file tracked down
    several alleged coup attempts organized by retired generals

    ANKARA - Turkish Daily News

    The Ergenekon case, which rocked the country with police raids and
    arrests, enters a new stage today as Istanbul's chief prosecutor is
    expected to reveal the long-awaited indictment.

    Chief Public Prosecutor Aykut Cengiz Engin will make a declaration
    today on the Ergenekon case's indictment, but he said he would not
    disclose information about its content. The country's newspapers have
    suggested it includes information on three coup attempts and a fourth
    one planned by an organization named the "Republican Working Group."

    The Istanbul Prosecutor's Office finished the 2,455
    page-long indictment a year and a month after the investigation
    began. Prosecutors Zekeriya Oz, Mehmet Pekguzel and Nihat TaÅ~_kın
    prepared the indictment and Oz delivered the completed file to
    Engin. The document includes names of 48 arrested people, among
    them retired Brig. Gen. Veli Kucuk and Workers' Party, or Ä°P,
    leader Dogu Perincek, and 85 suspects. It also contains names of
    20 witnesses that were kept anonymous as a measure of protection,
    newspapers claimed yesterday.

    'Gang poised to spark chaos':

    Details on the murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink and an
    armed assault on the Council of State are included in the indictment,
    with the assault covered in 60 pages. The two cases were referred to
    as actions aimed at sparking chaos in the country.

    Engin said today's announcement on the case would address the
    indictment's form and that he would not give information on suspects
    at large nor clarify exactly who is charged with what. He will
    inform the public on the number of detainees, people under arrest and
    accusations in general. A publication ban and secrecy on the content
    of the indictment will last until a court officially accepts the
    case. Prosecutors will not stop after submission of the indictment,
    however, as they will open a new file for suspects still monitored
    by wiretaps.

    The indictment also includes information on alleged meetings and
    seminars of Kucuk, Perincek, spokeswoman of the Turkish Orthodox
    Patriarchate Sevgi Erenerol, Great Jurists Association Chairman
    Kemal Kerincsiz and the organized crime network leader Sedat Peker,
    outside the country.

    Files of generals separated

    An additional indictment will be prepared for retired generals,
    Å~^ener Eruygur and HurÅ~_it Tolon.

    Tolon, former first army commander, is the head of the Ataturk
    Thought Association, or ADD, whereas Eruygur was the gendarmerie
    commander. Tolon's name is often mentioned in connection with alleged
    attempts to wreak havoc in the country to prepare suitable ground for
    the ruling Justice and Development Party's, or AKP, forcible removal
    from power.

    The latest wave of arrests included Ankara Chamber of Commerce,
    or ATO, Chairman Sinan Aygun.

    The indictment is one of the longest witnessed in Turkish history,
    as its content is divided under 40 headings and its 400 file-long
    annexes filled up three DVDs. Accusations against some high profile
    figures arrested in Ergenekon operations are as much as 150 pages long.

    The Ergenekon case started after the discovery of 27 hand grenades
    in a shanty house that belonged to a retired noncommissioned officer
    in Istanbul's Umraniye district on June 12, 2007.

    Following the announcement of the Ergenekon indictment, the Court
    for Serious Crimes, which is in summer recess, will determine which
    court will hear the case and convey the dossier and its annexes. The
    designated court will decide in 15 days whether to accept the
    case or send the indictment back to prosecutors highlighting any
    deficiencies. Once the court agrees to hear the case it will set a
    trial date.

    --Boundary_(ID_j7QRP+N4CxhW3CkPXfN6vg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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