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ANKARA: Anti-AKP Turkish Leftist Columnist's Custody Draws Fierce Re

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  • ANKARA: Anti-AKP Turkish Leftist Columnist's Custody Draws Fierce Re

    ANTI-AKP TURKISH LEFTIST COLUMNIST'S CUSTODY DRAWS FIERCE REACTION

    Hurriyet
    March 21 2008
    Turkey

    Leftist Cumhuriyet daily's columnist and chairman of the board
    of trustees Ilhan Selcuk was taken into custody early Friday with
    suspected links to an illegal gang which is accused of paving the
    way to a military coup. Media organizations and opposition parties
    slammed the move. Cumhuriyet said Selcuk's detention reminded the
    events of military intervention into politics from 1971 and 1980.

    In the operation 11 more people were taken into custody including
    Workers' Party leader Dogu Perincek and former rector of Istanbul
    University Prof. Kemal Alemdaroglu. Perincek was taken into custody
    in Ankara and brought to Istanbul for interrogation, the official
    Anatolian Agency reported.

    Turkish police searched branches of Workers' Party and private
    TV channel Ulusal Kanal in Istanbul. "Police staged simultaneous
    operations at the branches of Workers' Party, Ulusal Kanal and Aydinlik
    magazine in Istanbul and Ankara around 4-4:30 a.m. this morning,"
    Erkan Onsel, deputy chairman of the party, told reporters.

    Analysts say Selcuk's detention is a new episode in the nationalist
    and Islamist groups' struggle for power. Cumhuriyet is among the
    strongest opponents of the AKP government in media.

    High-level AKP officials, including Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan,
    have said the closure case against the ruling party was launched to
    cover up the Ergenekon operation.

    Selcuk is a very important and prominent figure in Turkey's
    leftist political movement. He was arrested in 1970s following a
    military-declared state of emergency. He has been writing columns in
    leftist Cumhuriyet daily, which became the symbol of anti-AKP movement,
    since 1963 and published number of books such as "I Think Therefore
    Shoot Me", "Left-Right-Sharia".

    Local news agencies reported almost 500 people gathered in front of
    the Cumhuriyet daily's headquarters in Istanbul as well as the Workers'
    Party building in Ankara to protest the custodies.

    Ibrahim Yildiz, editor-in-chief of Cumhuriyet, told journalists
    Selcuk's detention reminded the events of military intervention into
    politics from 1971 and 1980.

    "We suppose (Selcuk) is fine because we can't contact him. Ilhan
    Selcuk is 85 years old. He had had two serious heart attacks. We
    couldn't get any information and we are concerned", he added when
    asked about Selcuk's health condition under custody.

    He also said they tried to contact the President Abdullah Gul, Prime
    Minister Tayyip Erdogan and Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin but
    couldn't reach them.

    "SUPPRESSION POLICY AGAINST OPPOSITON"

    The leader of main opposition leftist CHP accused AKP of trying to
    create its own "deep state." "Turkey is being dragged into a very
    dangerous conflict. This process is not consistent with democracy,"
    Deniz Baykal told in a televised news conference in Ankara.

    The lawyer of Selcuk, Fikret Ilkiz, told reporters on Friday he will
    not be able to see his client for 24 hours, noting Selcuk was taken
    into custody under the anti-terror law. Ilkiz also urged integrity.

    "We have to take this as an investigation. It would be better if we
    stay a bit calm." He expects Selcuk's interrogation to be completed
    in 48 hours.

    The socialist independent MP Ufuk Uras showed reaction to Selcuk's
    detention, saying such threatening actions against journalists are
    hurting the public concisness and increasing concerns on judiciary.

    "Those exercises should be consistent with law and fundamentals
    of democracy. Such anti-democratic and threatening behaviors cause
    question marks in the soceity" he said in a statement on Friday.

    Oktay Eksi, the chairman of Turkish Press Council -an influent media
    organization-, said he was shocked by custody of Selcuk. "I don't think
    they are involved with such organization. I just want to say that I
    am shocked". Press Council is a self regulation platform created by
    journalists with the aim of realizing a freer and a more respectable
    press, according to its website.

    Another press organization said custody of Selcuk and Perincek similar
    to those that had happened during the military junta. "This situation
    is a suppression policy against opposing columnists, publishers and
    media", Ahmet Abakay, the chairman of Modern Journalists Association,
    said in a statement.

    ERGENEKON OPERATION

    The probe against the Ergenekon gang started after hand grenades that
    were issued to security forces were seized at the home of a retired
    military officer in Istanbul last June. A retired military commander
    and a lawyer were among those arrested earlier. A total of 39 people
    have been arrested under the investigation.

    Authorities have not commented publicly on the investigation, and
    most reports about the investigation have emerged in local media and
    are based on anonymous sources. The Ergenekon gang was suspected of
    being behind a series of bombings on the Cumhuriyet newspaper offices
    carried out last year, Turkish media have said previously.

    Newspapers have said the group had been plotting a series of bomb
    attacks and assassinations and were behind the killing of Turkish
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.
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