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ANKARA: Assassinations Were Crucial For Ergenekon Mission, Document

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  • ANKARA: Assassinations Were Crucial For Ergenekon Mission, Document

    ASSASSINATIONS WERE CRUCIAL FOR ERGENEKON MISSION, DOCUMENT SHOWS

    Today's Zaman
    Aug 7 2009
    Turkey

    An internal memorandum of the Ergenekon organization that was included
    in the third indictment against the group, accepted by the court
    hearing the case on Wednesday, explains to members why assassinations
    are crucial for reaching their aims.

    The document, titled "The Restructuring, Management and Development
    Project," reveals the cruelty Ergenekon was willing to resort
    to in order to realize its ultimate goal of fomenting chaos and
    overthrowing the government. The organization, which refers to itself
    as Ergenekon in the text, sees it as a primary mission to destroy
    all politicians that it deems to "have an ideology that goes against
    the regime," according to the document. The document also says it
    is an inevitable necessity that "assassination and disinformation"
    be employed as primary tactics to this end. The document, which
    states that all systems in the world that have managed to perpetuate
    their existence have relied on this path, says, "The only way to stop
    politicians who deem every method to be viable to reach their target
    is assassination." It also says that another inevitable necessity
    is cooperating with domestic and international illegal organizations
    that fight for similar ideals. The document puts forth the idea that
    Parliament should be composed of politicians who have similar opinions,
    saying this would make Parliament more effective and functional. If
    the structure of Parliament is closer to the stated ideal, then
    "assassination operations" would not be necessary, states the document.

    The document describes its structure as "an organization comprised
    of some valuable Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) members ... as well
    as intellectual civilians of all professional backgrounds that are
    loyal to Kemalism." The document recommends that the organization,
    which it says has been a late initiative, be developed as quickly as
    possible. "Ergenekon, with its civilian staff, which will be composed
    of the elite of all professional backgrounds, will increase its
    effectiveness significantly in both its domestic and international
    operations," it says. The text also emphasizes that Ergenekon is a
    "very special formation" and calls on taking the utmost care in the
    recruitment process of civilian members. It points to young officers in
    military academies and first and second year students in universities
    as a "positive source" for possible recruitment.

    The document also states that JÄ°TEM -- an illegal organization formed
    in the early 1990s inside the gendarmerie force under the guise of
    anti-terrorism efforts, but which turned into an illegal structure
    terrorizing the predominantly Kurdish Southeast in that decade with
    the help of martial law in place in most of the region's cities --
    has been a good example of how civilians employed in such causes can
    be useful. "Ergenekon has acquired adequate experience with the JÄ°TEM
    reality," the document says.

    The third indictment in the Ergenekon case, which was accepted by
    Ä°stanbul's 13th High Criminal Court on Wednesday, says that many
    assassinations previously thought unrelated to Ergenekon were the
    result of the organization's work. The indictment claims that an attack
    in 1993 by a fundamentalist mob in Sivas at a hotel where visiting
    Alevi poets and intellectuals were staying was also orchestrated
    by Ergenekon.

    The 1,454-page indictment also includes a breakdown of the
    assassinations and attacks planned for the future by the
    group, based on organizational documents acquired during the
    investigation. According to this, the group was planning to assassinate
    members of the higher judiciary, Armenian Patriarch Mesrob Mutafyan and
    Minas Durmaz Guler, head of the Sivas Armenian Community. Other targets
    of the group included Ali Balkız, chairman of the Alevi-BektaÅ~_i
    federation and the federation's secretary-general, Kazım Genc,
    both very important figures in the Alevi community. The prosecution
    also claims that the group had plans to assassinate journalist
    and author Fehmi Koru, Turkish Nobel laureate author Orhan Pamuk,
    Democratic Society Party (DTP) leader Ahmet Turk, Diyarbakır Mayor
    and DTP politician Osman Baydemir and DTP deputy Sebahat Tuncel. The
    indictment also notes that Selim Akkurt, one of the hit men recruited
    for these assassinations, was arrested shortly after a conversation
    between him and Ergenekon suspect Fikri Karadag was heard by the police
    monitoring the conversations, in order to avoid an "unwanted incident."

    The assassinations were to be carried out through a structure
    established by Ä°brahim Å~^ahin, the founder and later deputy chief
    of the National Police Department's Special Operations Unit.

    The prosecution's allegations against Å~^ahin include the formation of
    a structure called S-1, which would include teams of police officers
    with experience in special operations.
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