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ANKARA: Sketches Of Top Agencies Found During Ergenekon Raids

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  • ANKARA: Sketches Of Top Agencies Found During Ergenekon Raids

    SKETCHES OF TOP AGENCIES FOUND DURING ERGENEKON RAIDS

    Today's Zaman
    July 29 2008
    Turkey

    Elaborate drawings of the building plans for many key state agencies
    were found during the yearlong investigation into Ergenekon, a shadowy
    and powerful organization that allegedly planned to overthrow the
    government by force.

    Documents collected also suggest plans to assassinate the former
    Land Forces commander, whose promotion to chief of general staff was
    nearly certain at the time.According to the indictment, submitted
    to an Ä°stanbul court last week, highly detailed plans of many state
    buildings, such as the Supreme Court of Appeals, the NATO facilities
    in Ä°zmir and the military General Staff building, were found as a
    result of detentions, raids and searches during the investigation,
    which began last July.

    Ergenekon -- 46 of whose alleged members are currently in jail awaiting
    trial -- is suspected of a large number of unsolved political murders
    and attacks previously attributed to terrorist organizations of
    varying political leanings.

    The nearly 2,500-page indictment says drawings of some state buildings
    were found on a compact disc in a raid at the office of the Workers'
    Party (Ä°P), whose leader is currently jailed on suspicion of Ergenekon
    membership. A file folder on the disc named "Judiciary -- Nusret Senem
    [Ä°P secretary-general]" contains detailed drawings of the Supreme
    Court of Appeals, showing all the main entrance and exit points,
    possible security gaps, areas where the lighting is weak and security
    camera locations. The indictment recalled that the Supreme Court of
    Appeals chief prosecutor has received serious threats to his life.

    Other files on the compact disc reveal detailed sabotage plans,
    such as how to disable the ceiling sprinklers at NATO facilities
    in Ä°zmir. A map found in the same folder details the routes used
    by NATO personnel when driving to other facilities and points where
    security appears to be lax.

    Another plan, also found in an Ä°P office, serves as proof that in
    2005 the group planned to assassinate Gen. YaÅ~_ar Buyukanıt, the
    current chief of the Turkish military who was at the time the Land
    Forces commander.

    The prosecutor wrote: "The plans, projects and drawings show clearly
    that the organization had no problem acquiring information and
    intelligence to plot an assassination -- one of the methods of the
    organization to restrain governments, its main purpose -- and that
    all these building [drawings] were prepared by professionals."

    In addition, drawings of the General Staff, residential complexes
    for gendarmerie officers and their families, the route Buyukanıt
    was supposed to take when visiting Ä°zmir in 2005, the tube overpass
    in the Kızılay area of Ankara, drawings suggestive of plans to try
    to assassinate businessman Ä°shak Alaton and a drawing of a hotel in
    the KaÅ~_ district of the southern province of Antalya were found.

    The indictment, made public on Friday, says the Ergenekon network is
    behind a series of earth-shattering political assassinations over the
    past two decades. The victims include a secularist journalist, Ugur
    Mumcu, long believed to have been assassinated by Islamic extremists
    in 1993; the head of a business conglomerate, Ozdemir Sabancı, who
    was shot dead by militants of the extreme-left Revolutionary People's
    Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C) in his high-security office in 1996;
    secularist academic Necip Hablemitoglu, who was also believed to
    have been killed by Islamic extremists in 2002; and an attack on the
    Council of State in 2006 that left a senior judge dead. Alparslan
    Arslan, found guilty of the Council of State killing, said he attacked
    the court to protest an anti-headscarf decision it had made. But the
    indictment contains evidence that he had been in touch with Ergenekon
    and that his family received large sums of money from unidentified
    sources after the shooting.

    The indictment also says Veli Kucuk, believed to be one of the leading
    members of the network, had threatened Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian
    journalist slain by a teenager in 2007, before his murder, a sign
    that Ergenekon could be behind his death as well.

    Ergenekon suspects moved to Silivri

    The Ergenekon indictment accuses a total 86 suspects, 47 of whom are
    currently in custody, of links with the gang. Suspects will begin
    appearing before the court as of Oct. 20 and will face accusations
    that include "membership in an armed terrorist group," "attempting
    to destroy the government," "inciting people to rebel against the
    Republic of Turkey" and other similar crimes.

    On Monday the Ä°stanbul court that received the indictment ordered
    a transfer of all Ergenekon suspects under detention to a prison in
    the northwestern city of Silivri, due to the large number of suspects
    and the fact that they are currently being held in different jails.

    The court also ruled that four judges from the Council of State will
    attend the hearings as witnesses.

    --Boundary_(ID_fKK2fAwH/FIeqBRlD4rQHQ) --

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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