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  • ANKARA: Leftist anti-AKP journalist to be taken to court over

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    March 22 2008


    Turkey's leftist anti-AKP journalist to be taken to court over the
    weekend

    Leftist Cumhuriyet daily's columnist and chairman of the board of
    trustees Ilhan Selcuk is taken to the court with suspected links to
    an illegal gang which is accused of paving the way to a military
    coup. Private Star TV reported on Friday Selcuk was taken under
    custody with the claims "taking over a mission on behalf of an
    organization without being the member of the organization". (UPDATED)


    Selcuk, 85, was taken into custody on Friday around 4.30 am from his
    home. Selcuk's custody under the Ergenekon operation drew fierce
    criticism, some saying it reminded the events happened during the
    military junta in 1960s and 1970s.

    Selcuk is taken before the judge, who will decide whether to arrest
    or release following his interrogation completed, news agencies
    reported. Justice Ministry officials earlier told hurriyet.com.tr the
    way of taking Selcuk into custody, which drew fierce criticism, was
    the decision of the security officials, adding it's not an ordinary
    exercise and there was no such order from the prosecutor.

    Critics have said Selcuk was accompanied by two bodyguards appointed
    by Interior Ministry and had no way to escape so that he should have
    been invited for interrogation instead of taking into custody while
    he was sleeping.

    In the operation 11 more people were taken into custody in Friday's
    operation 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 has 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.

    There is no official statement or indictment on the Ergenekon
    Operation. But private Star TV reported on Friday Selcuk was taking
    under custody with the claims of "taking over a mission on behalf of
    an organization without being the member of the organization".

    CUMHURIYET IS ANTI-AKP
    Analysts say Selcuk's detention is a new episode in the secularists
    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".

    Hundreds of people gathered on Saturday in front of the Cumhuriyet
    building in Istanbul to protest Selcuk's custody and called the
    government to resign. Similar demonstrations were held at the
    Workers' Party building in Ankara.

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


    CHP: "DEEP STATE OF AKP"

    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 socialist independent MP Ufuk Uras also showed reaction to
    Selcuk's detention on Friday, 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.



    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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