Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: As Indictment Reading Ends, Defense Begins In Ergenekon Tria

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

  • ANKARA: As Indictment Reading Ends, Defense Begins In Ergenekon Tria

    AS INDICTMENT READING ENDS, DEFENSE BEGINS IN ERGENEKON TRIAL

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 11 2008
    Turkey

    The reading of a massive indictment against 86 suspects in the first
    trial against Ergenekon, a criminal network accused of plotting to
    overthrow the government, was completed yesterday at the trial's
    11th hearing.

    Because some of the suspects' lawyers had demanded shortly after the
    beginning of the trial in October that the 2,455-page indictment be
    read aloud, most of the trial time has been spent on this process
    since the third hearing on Oct. 27.

    The Ä°stanbul 13th High Criminal Court is hearing the case in a
    makeshift courtroom inside Silivri Prison near Ä°stanbul. Among the
    86 suspects are retired Gen. Veli Kucuk; lawyer Kemal Kerincsiz,
    who is known for filing lawsuits against intellectuals over writings
    that question or criticize the state line on issues such as Armenian
    allegations of genocide; and retired Capt. Muzaffer Tekin. Forty-six of
    the suspects are in custody, and the rest have been released pending
    the outcome of the trial.

    Meanwhile, lawyer Bozkurt Nuhoglu in yesterday's hearing asked the
    presiding judge to hold a moment of silence for the nation's founder,
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, to mark the 70th anniversary of his death.

    The judge rejected the request, saying, "We completed that duty before
    we came here."

    Nuhoglu is representing Emin Gurses, a professor of international
    relations who was detained in the Ergenekon investigation on Feb. 26

    Eruygur's health deteriorating

    Meanwhile, a lawyer representing retired Gen. Å~^ener Eruygur, a
    prime suspect in the Ergenekon trial who was released by order of
    the Ä°stanbul 9th Higher Criminal Court after he suffered a brain
    hemorrhage as a result of a head injury in a fall in October, said
    yesterday his client has been acting "strangely" since undergoing
    brain surgery.

    Filiz Ersen told journalists yesterday that the general kept slipping
    into unconsciousness and that his behavior was erratic, sometimes like
    that of a child. "Sometimes he can't even recognize his wife. He can
    only walk when two people are supporting him on either side. He thinks
    the gendarmerie officers assigned to protect him are prison guards,
    and he gets very scared."

    Eruygur is undergoing treatment at the Kocaeli University Teaching
    and Research Hospital.

    His lawyer said once his client can maintain his consciousness more
    fully, they will be filing the necessary legal complaints against
    the relevant institutions regarding the accident Eruygur had in prison.

    Ergenekon indictment

    The existence of Ergenekon has long been suspected, but the current
    investigation into the group began only in 2007, when a house in
    Ä°stanbul's Umraniye district that was being used as an arms depot
    was discovered by police.

    The indictment, made public in July, claims that the Ergenekon
    network is behind a series of political assassinations carried out
    over the past two decades for the ultimate purpose of triggering a
    military coup and taking over the government. The victims include
    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; and secularist academic Necip
    Hablemitoglu, who was also believed to have been killed by Islamic
    extremists in 2002.

    Suspects face various charges, including "membership in an armed
    terrorist group," "attempting to destroy the government," "inciting
    people to rebel against the Republic of Turkey" and other similar
    crimes.

    Prosecutor gives HoÅ~_tan speedy response

    A suspect who objected to the description of his job as a drug
    smuggler in the Ergenekon indictment received a speedy response from
    prosecutors yesterday at a courtroom set up in Silivri Prison, where
    all 86 suspects in the case are being held.

    During the reading of the indictment at yesterday's hearing, Sami
    HoÅ~_tan, a key figure in an investigation launched after a car
    accident in 1996 near the small town of Susurluk that uncovered links
    between a police chief, a convicted ultranationalist fugitive and a
    member of Parliament, said the prosecution was aiming to smear his
    name by referring to him as a drug smuggler in the indictment.

    Responding to allegations that he was involved in the narcotics
    trade in cooperation with a clandestine and illegitimate gendarmerie
    intelligence unit known as JÄ°TEM, HoÅ~_tan demanded that the
    prosecution withdraw the parts of the indictment where he is
    referred to as a drug smuggler. Mehmet Ali Pekguzel, one of the three
    prosecutors in the case, gave a speedy response in the courtroom,
    noting that HoÅ~_tan was captured in Germany on Oct. 10, 1974 while
    trying to sell four kilograms of heroin to undercover German officers,
    for which he was convicted a year later and sentenced to five years,
    six months in prison, after which he was extradited to Turkey. HoÅ~_tan
    did not respond to the prosecution's statement.

    Also yesterday, suspect Kemal Kerincsiz, a controversial
    ultranationalist lawyer who filed countless lawsuits against Turkish
    writers and intellectuals who were at odds with Turkey's official
    policies regarding Armenian genocide allegations, accused the
    prosecution of having set traps for secret witnesses in the case. "I
    can't call these people jurists. I don't believe that secret witness
    testimonies before cameras were transcribed correctly. I demand
    that all footage be given to the court and that the secret witnesses
    testify before the court. I think there is a nauseating and despicable
    relationship between the secret witnesses and the prosecution."

    Prosecutor Pekguzel asserted that Kerincsiz exceeded the boundaries
    of his rights as a defendant and requested that prosecutors file
    a complaint against Kerincsiz with the Silivri Public Prosecutor's
    Office. Erkan Acar, BuÅ~_ra Erdal Ä°stanbul

    --Boundary_(ID_NDsflAsXCCEYZZ nycO0yUQ)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X