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ANKARA: Report: CYDD Documents Suggest Link With Ergenekon

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  • ANKARA: Report: CYDD Documents Suggest Link With Ergenekon

    REPORT: CYDD DOCUMENTS SUGGEST LINK WITH ERGENEKON

    Today's Zaman
    April 28 2009
    Turkey

    Documents seized at the Kadikoy office of the Support for Modern
    Life Association (CYDD) during a police raid earlier this month
    have revealed that the association had close ties to Ergenekon, a
    clandestine terrorist organization charged with plotting to overthrow
    the government, according to a report published in the Bugun daily
    yesterday.

    While going through documents seized at the CYDD Kadikoy office on
    April 13, police found a document titled "_2008toplantiozeti" (summary
    of 2008 meeting). The document reveals that the association was in
    close cooperation with Ergenekon, taking orders from and reporting
    to the terrorist organization, Bugun reported.

    According to the document, CYDD officials informed retired Gen. Sener
    Eruygur, a suspected member of Ergenekon, about the activities of
    the association. "We will destroy the studies previously conducted
    for rector appointments. Lists forwarded to Sener Pasha bearing the
    names of scholarship applicants will also be destroyed. We will not
    have direct contact with the rectors of Istanbul, Inonu, Antalya,
    Samsun, Uludag and Dokuz Eylul universities, but will continue to
    support them. ... We previously established contact with Tuncay Ozkan
    [a journalist currently in jail for suspected links with Ergenekon]. We
    will avoid appearing close to him for a while. [Republican] Rallies
    could be organized once more to mobilize the public," reads the
    document, as reported in Bugun. Another document reportedly reveals the
    association's efforts to organize young people: "We should increase
    the number of houses where students are accommodated and select
    neighborhoods where female and male students can reside together. We
    should not keep sacred materials in the open in these houses. The
    European Union appreciates our project to benefit from the richness and
    diversity of the Armenian, Syriac, Chaldean and Yezidi communities."

    The documents also serve as proof, says the Bugun report, for claims
    that the CYDD granted scholarships to members of the outlawed Kurdistan
    Workers' Party (PKK). "We have to be careful about scholarships granted
    to students who are implicated in arson. Turkan [Saylan] said we may
    delete the records of scholarships offered to these people, but must
    not stop granting them money," reads one of the documents.

    Police believe many recent arson attacks on vehicles in a number of
    Turkish cities, including Istanbul, Izmir and Ankara, are the work
    of PKK supporters, states Bugun. Since November 2007, PKK supporters
    have torched hundreds of automobiles parked on streets to protest
    Turkey's operations against the terrorist organization.

    According to the documents, the CYDD was quite meticulous when
    selecting scholarship recipients. The association refused to provide
    religious students with financial aid. "We will continue our efforts
    to win over Alevi families. Our target is those who have not been
    assimilated by Sunnis. They should have no ties with religion. ... We
    have received criticism that some girls to whom we have granted
    scholarships wear the Islamic headscarf after they graduate. This
    is very important. Such incidents have a bad impact on those who
    financially support our association. We have to be very careful,"
    one document remarks, according to Bugun.

    The association has also been very careful to avoid being linked to
    Ergenekon suspects, as is expressed in one of the documents, which
    says CYDD members should not contact people who have been detained
    or arrested as part of the Ergenekon investigation.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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