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ANKARA: Neo-Nationalist Party Leader Perincek Arrested

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  • ANKARA: Neo-Nationalist Party Leader Perincek Arrested

    NEO-NATIONALIST PARTY LEADER PERINCEK ARRESTED

    Today's Zaman
    March 25 2008
    Turkey

    A Turkish court on Monday filed charges against the leader of a small
    leftist, neo-nationalistic political party in a probe into a network
    of extreme nationalists who allegedly want to topple the governing
    Justice and Development Party (AK Party).

    The court in Istanbul charged Doðu Perincek with "being a senior member
    of a terrorist organization and obtaining and possessing classified
    documents." Perincek is the leader of the Workers' Party (ÝP), which
    won a tiny fraction of the vote in general elections last summer. In
    2007, a Swiss court convicted Perincek of racism for denying that
    the mass killing of Armenians in the early 20th century was genocide.

    Perincek was among several alleged suspects detained Friday by
    police for interrogation. The court also ordered a former university
    president, Kemal Alemdaroðlu, not to leave the country and to check
    in with his local police station every 15 days. Ýlhan Selcuk of the
    secularist Cumhuriyet newspaper, a fierce critic of Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdoðan's government, was also taken into custody on
    Friday. The arrests of Alemdaroðlu and Perincek came only a day after
    the 83-year-old journalist was released.

    The suspects are thought to be linked to a criminal gang called
    Ergenekon with alleged links to power centers in the bureaucracy and
    the military. The ongoing investigation previously uncovered evidence
    showing that the gang was attempting to prepare the way for a coup
    d'etat in Turkey in 2009. Ergenekon is suspected of links to groups
    hidden within the state. These groups are commonly referred to as
    Turkey's deep state, a phenomenon in which individuals and groups
    occupying various state positions take justice into their own hands
    to shape Turkey in accordance with their political convictions.

    On Monday, Perincek was sent to Bayrampaþa Prison after an arrest
    warrant was issued by the Ýstanbul court. A group of ÝP supporters
    gathered in front of the courthouse to protest the decision.

    Alemdaroðlu spoke to press members after he left the courthouse,
    suggesting that the accusation of membership in the neo-nationalist
    Ergenekon was brought against him and other secularist opponents of
    the AK Party because of pressure from the government on the judiciary.

    Plans for attack on Supreme Court of Appeals

    A CD found in the headquarters of the ÝP during the Ergenekon
    investigation revealed the gang's plans to stage an attack on the
    Supreme Court of Appeals, the Taraf daily reported in its headline
    story on Monday. A detailed map of the high court is shown on the CD,
    clearly noting all the points that provide fast and easy access to the
    outside of the building. The most detailed mapping in the plan was
    done for building A, which is where Supreme Court of Appeals' Chief
    Prosecutor Abdurrahman Yalcýnkaya's chambers are located. A copy of an
    indictment file against the AK Party for its closure, prepared by none
    other than Yalcýnkaya, was also found on a computer inside the ÝP,
    supporting claims in the media that the closure case against the AK
    Party was in retaliation to the crackdown on Ergenekon. The indictment
    had been saved on the computer two days before the case was filed.

    Parliament Speaker Koksal Toptan, in response to a question on the
    investigation, denied claims that the prosecutor on the Ergenekon
    case was being pressured by the government to harass secularists. "I
    call on everyone to act with common sense and calmness. Everything
    has a rule of conduct in Turkey; Turkey is a state of law. I hope
    that the recent events will actually contribute to our process of
    democratic improvement."

    Meanwhile, in a written statement released yesterday, Ýstanbul Chief
    Prosecutor Aykut Cengiz Engin said, "The operations and procedures
    being carried out under the investigation named Ergenekon have no
    ties to any other cases that are currently in the public spotlight."

    He said "a significant majority" of the news stories, commentaries
    and evaluations that appeared in the press regarding the Friday raids
    in which 14 people were detained did not reflect the truth.

    Engin noted that the investigation was confidential, saying that
    currently there is a ban on publishing news about the judicial process
    on Ergenekon. He stated that there were currently three prosecutors
    working on the case.

    "The Ergenekon investigation started in June of 2007 and none of the
    operations carried out under the scope of this investigation, including
    the arrests made on March 21, 2008, have anything to do with any of the
    other cases that are currently in the public spotlight," stated Engin.

    "Independent organs of the judiciary are carrying out their duties
    only using their authority based on law and it is impossible that
    they are acting with ulterior motives or are being influenced by an
    individual, group or agency," Engin said.

    "However, certain news stories and commentaries in the press that do
    not reflect the reality of the situation are making it more difficult
    to conduct the investigation in the best manner," he noted.

    Engin also said the Ergenekon investigation was nearing its end. He
    noted that the judiciary process for those currently under arrest
    would be completed within a month.

    Head of the staunchly secularist Republican People's Party's (CHP)
    parliamentary group Kemal Anadol, during a Friday press conference he
    held at Parliament, demanded from the prime minister that the sources
    of some members of the media who apparently know the details of the
    Ergenekon interrogation should be revealed. Without directly citing
    names, he recalled that Yeni Þafak writer Fehmi Koru had suggested
    that Cumhuriyet's Selcuk would be taken into custody for being part of
    the criminal organization before that actually happened. He said he
    suspected that some of the press had access to the documents of the
    investigation -- which have been classified as strictly confidential
    from day one -- at the police department.

    In January 39 people were arrested as part of an investigation
    following up on a police raid in June 2007 on a house being used as
    an arms depot in Ýstanbul. Those arrested included retired Gen. Veli
    Kucuk -- also the alleged founder of an illegal intelligence unit in
    the gendarmerie, the existence of which is denied by officials --
    controversial ultranationalist lawyer Kemal Kerincsiz, who filed
    countless suits against Turkish writers and intellectuals who
    were at odds with Turkey's official policies, retired Col. Fikret
    Karadað, Sevgi Erenerol, the press spokesperson for the so-called
    "Turkish Orthodox Patriarchate," and Sami Hoþtan, a key figure in an
    investigation launched after a car accident in 1996 near the small
    town of Susurluk uncovered links between a police chief, a convicted
    ultranationalist fugitive and a member of Parliament. Ali Yasak,
    a well-known gangster linked to figures in the Susurluk incident,
    was also detained in the operation.

    The group is also suspected of involvement in the murder of journalist
    Hrant Dink in January of last year, a shooting at the Council of State
    in 2006 that left a senior judge dead, a hand grenade attack on the
    Cumhuriyet daily's Ýstanbul office and recent non-fatal attacks on two
    priests. The number of people in custody on suspicion of having links
    to the gang is said to have surpassed 50 with the recent detentions,
    sources say.

    --Boundary_(ID_IvzdmwlxdJXF+cb4D1XtuQ)--
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