COUP DEBATE RESURFACES IN TURKEY FOLLOWING THE THIRD ERGENEKON INDICTMENT
Emrullah Uslu
Jamestown Foundation
Aug 6 2009
The prosecutors investigating the Ergenekon criminal network that
allegedly aimed at overthrowing the Turkish government by organizing
a military coup, has finalized the third indictment, consisting of
1,454 pages and indicting 52 high profile individuals. The judges
hearing the Ergenekon trial accepted the indictment and announced
that the trial will begin on September 7.
The evidence collected for the third indictment indicates a conspiracy
to organize a military coup against the Justice and Development Party's
(AKP) government. Prosecutors accused the Ergenekon network of planning
at least 10 assassinations against leading figures in society in order
to create chaos as a first step toward staging a military coup. The
Turkish press highlighted these assassination plans as one of the
main pillars of the indictment. According to the indictment the
targets included Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, supreme court judges
in Ankara, NATO facilities in Izmir, the former Chief of the General
Staff General Yasar Buyukanit, the journalist Fehmi Koru and a Nobel
Prize winning author Orhan Pamuk, as well as Kurdish nationalist
politicians including the Chairman of the Democratic Society Party
(DTP), Ahmet Turk, the Mayor of Diyarbakir, Ocman Baydemir, and
DTP deputy Sebahat Tuncel, Armenian businessman Minas Durmaz Guler,
Armenian Orthodox Church patriarch Mesrob Mutafyan, and the leaders of
the Alevi communities Ali Balkiz and Kazim Genc (Milliyet, August 6).
Since the start of the Ergenekon investigation the Alevi communities,
who oppose the AKP government, argued that the government is
using the case as a tool to suppress opposition groups. The
Alevi communities were also the most vocal opposition against the
Ergenekon investigation. However, as the evidence provided in the
third indictment appears to involve the Alevi leaders, Ali Balkiz and
Kazim Genc, they have applied to the court as victims of the Ergenekon
network (Radikal, August 6). In one of his earlier statements Balkiz
revealed that the prosecutors invited him to reveal evidence about the
assassination plot against him. Balkiz stated that this including a
sketch showing his home and the daily routes that he uses to travel
to work, and the place where the assassination might occur. He is
also convinced that the Ergenekon investigation is not a political
tool to suppress the opposition (Zaman, March 10).
In addition to these documents and witness testimony the third
indictment included reference to weapons and ammunition found in
Ergenekon hideouts as proof of the alleged plot. The weapons that were
listed in the indictment included 43 light anti-tank weapons, 12 light
weight rockets, 19 emergency flares, 424 hand grenades, 800 G3 bullets,
20 incendiary devices, three other explosives including 250 grams of
C4 explosive, and a large quantity of bullets and other weapons were
also listed in the indictment (Third Ergenekon Indictment, August 5).
Furthermore, the indictment included the former Chief of the General
Staff General Hilmi Ozkok's testimony to prove that there were generals
and other high ranking officers involved. Ozkok in his testimony
told the prosecutors: "I knew of the Ayisigi [moonlight] and Yakamoz
[phosphorescence in sea-water] issues [coup plots]. I had received
some information but could not take action for lack of evidence,"
(Taraf, August 6). In regard to the question as to whether the National
Intelligence Service (MIT) informed him about the Ergenekon network,
Ozkok said that he was briefed informally, but never given any official
documentation from the MIT during his term in office. However, the
MIT earlier said that it had sent a booklet on Ergenekon twice to
the General Staff in 2003 and 2006. Ozkok's statements have raised
numerous unanswered questions (Milliyet, August 6).
The coup diaries allegedly belonging to the former commander of
the Turkish navy Admiral Ozden Ornek, which were published by Nokta
magazine in 2008, also featured in the indictment. The controversial
Ergenekon case is therefore portrayed as an investigation seeking to
crack down on the alleged Ergenekon network, which aimed to topple
the government (Third Ergenekon Indictment, August 5).
The opposition groups did not take the earlier two indictments
as seriously, since in their view the documents appeared to be
geared toward suppressing the opposition. However, with this latest
indictment it seems that at least some of the opposition (notably
the Alevi's) now regard the Ergenekon network as a real organization
able to create chaos within the country. The testimony of General
Ozkok and the weapons listed in the third indictment appeared to be
convincing evidence, and at least suggested that the investigation
must be taken seriously. Given that the former Chief of the General
Staff General Hilmi Ozkok admitted that there were attempts to
overthrow the government, it still remains to be seen as to whether
the Ergenekon prosecutors will conduct a separate investigation on
the attempted coup, or if they will include it in future indictments
in the Ergenekon trail.
Emrullah Uslu
Jamestown Foundation
Aug 6 2009
The prosecutors investigating the Ergenekon criminal network that
allegedly aimed at overthrowing the Turkish government by organizing
a military coup, has finalized the third indictment, consisting of
1,454 pages and indicting 52 high profile individuals. The judges
hearing the Ergenekon trial accepted the indictment and announced
that the trial will begin on September 7.
The evidence collected for the third indictment indicates a conspiracy
to organize a military coup against the Justice and Development Party's
(AKP) government. Prosecutors accused the Ergenekon network of planning
at least 10 assassinations against leading figures in society in order
to create chaos as a first step toward staging a military coup. The
Turkish press highlighted these assassination plans as one of the
main pillars of the indictment. According to the indictment the
targets included Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, supreme court judges
in Ankara, NATO facilities in Izmir, the former Chief of the General
Staff General Yasar Buyukanit, the journalist Fehmi Koru and a Nobel
Prize winning author Orhan Pamuk, as well as Kurdish nationalist
politicians including the Chairman of the Democratic Society Party
(DTP), Ahmet Turk, the Mayor of Diyarbakir, Ocman Baydemir, and
DTP deputy Sebahat Tuncel, Armenian businessman Minas Durmaz Guler,
Armenian Orthodox Church patriarch Mesrob Mutafyan, and the leaders of
the Alevi communities Ali Balkiz and Kazim Genc (Milliyet, August 6).
Since the start of the Ergenekon investigation the Alevi communities,
who oppose the AKP government, argued that the government is
using the case as a tool to suppress opposition groups. The
Alevi communities were also the most vocal opposition against the
Ergenekon investigation. However, as the evidence provided in the
third indictment appears to involve the Alevi leaders, Ali Balkiz and
Kazim Genc, they have applied to the court as victims of the Ergenekon
network (Radikal, August 6). In one of his earlier statements Balkiz
revealed that the prosecutors invited him to reveal evidence about the
assassination plot against him. Balkiz stated that this including a
sketch showing his home and the daily routes that he uses to travel
to work, and the place where the assassination might occur. He is
also convinced that the Ergenekon investigation is not a political
tool to suppress the opposition (Zaman, March 10).
In addition to these documents and witness testimony the third
indictment included reference to weapons and ammunition found in
Ergenekon hideouts as proof of the alleged plot. The weapons that were
listed in the indictment included 43 light anti-tank weapons, 12 light
weight rockets, 19 emergency flares, 424 hand grenades, 800 G3 bullets,
20 incendiary devices, three other explosives including 250 grams of
C4 explosive, and a large quantity of bullets and other weapons were
also listed in the indictment (Third Ergenekon Indictment, August 5).
Furthermore, the indictment included the former Chief of the General
Staff General Hilmi Ozkok's testimony to prove that there were generals
and other high ranking officers involved. Ozkok in his testimony
told the prosecutors: "I knew of the Ayisigi [moonlight] and Yakamoz
[phosphorescence in sea-water] issues [coup plots]. I had received
some information but could not take action for lack of evidence,"
(Taraf, August 6). In regard to the question as to whether the National
Intelligence Service (MIT) informed him about the Ergenekon network,
Ozkok said that he was briefed informally, but never given any official
documentation from the MIT during his term in office. However, the
MIT earlier said that it had sent a booklet on Ergenekon twice to
the General Staff in 2003 and 2006. Ozkok's statements have raised
numerous unanswered questions (Milliyet, August 6).
The coup diaries allegedly belonging to the former commander of
the Turkish navy Admiral Ozden Ornek, which were published by Nokta
magazine in 2008, also featured in the indictment. The controversial
Ergenekon case is therefore portrayed as an investigation seeking to
crack down on the alleged Ergenekon network, which aimed to topple
the government (Third Ergenekon Indictment, August 5).
The opposition groups did not take the earlier two indictments
as seriously, since in their view the documents appeared to be
geared toward suppressing the opposition. However, with this latest
indictment it seems that at least some of the opposition (notably
the Alevi's) now regard the Ergenekon network as a real organization
able to create chaos within the country. The testimony of General
Ozkok and the weapons listed in the third indictment appeared to be
convincing evidence, and at least suggested that the investigation
must be taken seriously. Given that the former Chief of the General
Staff General Hilmi Ozkok admitted that there were attempts to
overthrow the government, it still remains to be seen as to whether
the Ergenekon prosecutors will conduct a separate investigation on
the attempted coup, or if they will include it in future indictments
in the Ergenekon trail.