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ANKARA: Conversation Links Ergenekon With US Consulate Attack

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  • ANKARA: Conversation Links Ergenekon With US Consulate Attack

    CONVERSATION LINKS ERGENEKON WITH US CONSULATE ATTACK

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 18 2008
    Turkey

    Three police officers were shot dead in an armed attack eaerly in July
    this year at the US Consulate General in Ä°stanbul's Ä°stinye district.

    One of the assailants in a deadly armed attack on the US Consulate
    General in Ä°stanbul in July had engaged in phone conversations
    with suspects arrested as part of the investigation into Ergenekon,
    a neo-nationalist gang believed to be the extension of a clandestine
    network of groups with members in the armed forces that planned to
    overthrow the government.

    Erkan Kargın, one of the assailants killed in the attack, had talked
    to individuals currently in jail as Ergenekon suspects, the police
    investigation into the US Consulate General attack showed. According
    to transcripts of the phone conversations recorded last year with a
    special warrant as part of the Ergenekon investigation, Kargın was
    in close contact with a group within Ergenekon that was trying to
    infiltrate the Ä°smailaga religious community, whose members reside
    in the very conservative CarÅ~_amba area of Fatih in Istanbul. Most
    of the phone conversations were about this mission of infiltrating
    the community, police sources say.

    Shortly after the US consulate attack, Kargın's family, in their
    testimony to the police, had stated that he had contact with mysterious
    individuals.

    Four gunmen stormed a guard post outside of the US Consulate General in
    Ä°stanbul's Ä°stinye neighborhood on the morning of July 9, starting a
    deadly shootout. Three assailants, identified as Erkan Kargın, Bulent
    Cınar and Raif Topcil, were killed in the assault. Three Turkish
    police officers, Nedim Calık, Mehmet Onder Sacmalıoglu and Erdal
    OztaÅ~_, were also slain. Computers, Internet communications and phone
    conversations of the three terrorists were thoroughly examined by the
    police in the ensuing investigation. Details of OztaÅ~_'s phone records
    showed that the terrorist had contacts with a large number of people
    who are part of the Ergenekon network, a fact that further supports
    allegations that Ergenekon was behind the US consulate shootings.

    What is Ergenekon?

    The existence of Ergenekon, a behind-the-scenes network attempting
    to use social and psychological engineering to shape the country
    in accordance with its own ultranationalist ideology, 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 investigation was expanded to reveal elements of what in Turkey is
    called the deep state, finally proving the existence of the network,
    which is currently being accused of trying to incite chaos and disorder
    in order to trigger a coup against the Justice and Development Party
    (AK Party) government.

    The indictment, which was made public in July, claims that the
    Ergenekon network is behind a series of political assassinations
    carried out over the past two decades. The victims include a 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; secularist academic Necip Hablemitoglu,
    who was also believed to have been killed by Islamic extremists, in
    2002; and a 2006 attack on the Council of State that left a senior
    judge dead. Alparslan Arslan, found guilty of the Council of State
    killing, said he attacked the court in protest of an anti-headscarf
    ruling it had made. But the indictment contains evidence that he was
    connected with Ergenekon and that his family received large sums of
    money from unidentified sources after the shooting.

    Eighty-six suspects, 47 of whom are currently under arrest, are accused
    of having suspicious links to the gang. Suspects will start appearing
    before the court on Oct. 20 and will face accusations that include
    "membership in an armed terrorist group," "attempting to bring down
    the government," "inciting people to rebel against the Republic of
    Turkey" and other similar crimes.

    The indictment also says Veli Kucuk, believed to be one of the leading
    members of the network, had threatened Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian
    journalist slain by a teenager in 2007, before his murder -- a sign
    that Ergenekon could be behind that murder as well.

    --Boundary_(ID_pAkkaqllRINwajOFfWPQPw)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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