Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish party leader, journalist arrested in nationalist gang probe

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkish party leader, journalist arrested in nationalist gang probe

    Agence France Presse
    March 21, 2008 Friday


    Turkish party leader, journalist arrested in nationalist gang probe

    ANKARA

    Turkish police on Friday detained 12 people, including a politician,
    a prominent journalist and an academic, in a probe into a shadowy
    network of suspected ultra-nationalists, Anatolia news agency said.

    Those detained included: Dogu Perincek, leader of the once-Maoist,
    now nationalist Workers' Party; Ilhan Selcuk, chief editorialist and
    leading light of the strictly secular, anti-government daily
    Cumhuriyet; and Kemal Alemdaroglu, a former president of Istanbul
    University.

    Police seized documents and software at a television station partly
    owned by Perincek's party and also searched 83-year-old Selcuk's
    home, it said.

    The three men are being questioned by police and will appear in the
    coming days before a public prosecutor who will decide on whether to
    release or formally charge them, the report said.

    Anatolia did not say why they were detained, but said the arrests are
    linked to an investigation into an ultra-nationalist group known as
    Ergenekon, first heard of in June with the discovery of explosives in
    an Istanbul house.

    Thirty-nine people -- retired soldiers, journalists, lawyers and
    underworld figures -- were formally charged in the investigation that
    ensued.

    Cumhuriyet issued a statement branding Selcuk's arrest a bid by the
    government to silence Turkey's oldest major daily and distract
    attention from a pending legal bid to ban the ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AKP).

    "We will not become a pawn in the ploy to link the Ergenekon
    investigation to the case to close the AKP and to intimidate and
    silence Cumhuriyet," Anatolia quoted editor-in-chief Ibrahim Yildiz
    as saying.

    The Cumhuriyet newspaper is one of the most vocal critics of the
    Islamist-rooted AKP, which secularists accuse of seeking to undermine
    the separation of state and religion in Turkey.

    There has so far been no official statement on the probe into
    Ergenekon, conducted behind under a secrecy law that restricts media
    coverage.

    Turkish newspapers, citing unnamed sources, say police are
    investigating whether the suspects charged so far were involved in
    acts of political violence aiming to discredit the government of
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    This would include the murders of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink, the Italian Catholic priest Andrea Santoro and a senior judge
    killed by a gunman who stormed into the country's top administrative
    court, they said.

    Newspaper reports also claim that some of the accused planned to
    assassinate 2006 Nobel literature laureat Orhan Pamuk, prominent
    pro-government journalist Fehmi Koru and Kurdish politicians Leyla
    Zana, Osman Baydemir and Ahmet Turk.

    The media here has described the investigation as a blow against the
    "deep state" -- a term used here to describe members of the security
    forces acting outside the law to preserve what they consider Turkey's
    best interests, often employing the services of the underworld.
Working...
X