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ANKARA: Coup Plot Against Ecevit Sparks Debate

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  • ANKARA: Coup Plot Against Ecevit Sparks Debate

    COUP PLOT AGAINST ECEVIT SPARKS DEBATE

    Zaman Online
    July 18 2008
    Turkey

    Relying on parts of the Ergenekon indictment leaked to the press,
    newspapers reported yesterday that the Ergenekon gang, a crime network
    suspected of plotting to topple the ruling Justice and Development
    Party (AK Party), tried to overthrow the coalition government of the
    late Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit, who served between 1999 and 2002.

    The leader of Ecevit's Democratic Left Party (DSP), Zeki Sezer,
    also confirmed that several retired senior generals at the time had
    "expressed their wish" to see Ecevit resign. Although there is now
    a general consensus that the generals put some pressure on Ecevit to
    urge him to resign, it is a matter of discussion whether this was a
    coup attempt and whether those generals had any links to Ergenekon.

    Radikal's Murat Yetkin, a journalist who closely followed the Ecevit
    government, admits that high-ranking military officers pressured the
    late prime minister in 2001 to resign; however, he says he has no idea
    whether those generals were part of the Ergenekon organization. "I
    personally witnessed them meddling in politics, though it was not
    tantamount to a military coup," says Yetkin. Since the full text of
    the Ergenekon indictment has not yet been made public, he says it
    is hard to know whether allegations about a coup attempt against
    Ecevit's government are this pressure he witnessed or something
    entirely different. According to Yetkin, Ecevit did not take any
    action against these military officers back then and that his lack
    of influence in the decisions of the Supreme Military Council (YAÅ~^)
    of 2002 proves as much.

    Sabah's Ergun Babahan complains that those who defend Ergenekon today
    by downplaying the allegations walked hand in hand in the past to
    unseat Ecevit. Among those who took part in this plot at that time,
    he says, were some commanders, retired generals, leading figures
    in the business sector and, inevitably, the media. "They headlined
    reckless news about Ecevit's health after he was hospitalized [in
    an attempt to have him resign]," says Babahan, adding that the same
    circles are at work again today since they have rolled up their
    sleeves and are trying to trivialize the Ergenekon case and remove
    it from Turkey's agenda. The reason these circles are uneasy with the
    Ergenekon investigation, in his view, is their concern that their real
    face will come to light as a result of this operation. "They want to
    make you believe that a group of idle youth killed Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink and an attack against the Council of State in
    2006 [which left a senior judge dead] was the work of a religious
    fundamentalist who wanted to protest a ban on Muslim headscarves. They
    also suggest that the bombs [which had the same serial number as
    those belonging to the Ergenekon gang] hurled at the Cumhuriyet
    newspaper were accidentally thrown there. They do not want to ask
    for an accounting of these incidents because they were personally
    involved in them. Let them first say what they did to Ecevit, and
    then we can talk about today," says Babahan.

    Vatan daily's Bilal Cetin asked Husamettin Ozkan, the deputy prime
    minister in Ecevit's government and a close ally of Ecevit, about
    a coup attempt against Ecevit's government in which Ozkan allegedly
    demanded to take over the prime ministry from Ecevit. Cetin, quoting
    Ozkan, says: "Never, ever. None of the commanders of the time even
    made such an implication. These allegations were only brought forward
    by Radikal columnist Murat Yetkin. I heard this only from him. Other
    than this, no one said anything to me about it." Cetin, referring
    to what Yetkin wrote, says it is very obvious that the commanders of
    the time had voiced wishes to see Ecevit resign; however, it is not
    certain whether this was tantamount to a coup attempt.

    --Boundary_(ID_ER3DhNaCqbHOGptNpb54UA)--
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