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Turkish Court Seeks To Link Murder Of Christians To 'Cage Plan'

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  • Turkish Court Seeks To Link Murder Of Christians To 'Cage Plan'

    TURKISH COURT SEEKS TO LINK MURDER OF CHRISTIANS TO 'CAGE PLAN'

    Christian Post
    Dec 29 2009

    ISTANBUL (Compass Direct News) - Malatya's Third Criminal Court on
    Friday took further steps to connect the murders of three Christians
    in southeastern Turkey to a Turkish military plan to destabilize the
    pro-Islamic government.

    Evidence surfaced in Turkish press last month linking the murders of
    the three Christians in the southeastern city of Malatya with army
    activities to overthrow the government in a special operation called
    the "Operation Cage Action Plan." The Malatya prosecutor and plaintiffs
    on Friday requested that the Istanbul prosecutor further probe links
    between the Malatya case and the Cage Plan, which included an elaborate
    scheme to attack Muslim-majority Turkey's religious minorities.

    They also requested that the Malatya court open to plaintiffs the
    currently "classified" prosecutor's investigation into links between
    the Malatya murders and an alleged operation by the military and other
    political figures to destabilize the government known as Ergenekon.

    Evidence of the Cage Plan, believed to be part of Ergenekon, centers on
    a compact disc found in April in the house of a retired naval officer;
    it was decrypted and leaked to the press last month. The plan, to be
    carried out by 41 named naval officers and dated March 2009, termed
    as "operations" the murders of the three Christians in Malatya, the
    2006 assassination of Catholic priest Andreas Santoro and the 2007
    slaying of Hrant Dink, Armenian editor-in-chief of the weekly Agos.

    "This Cage Plan starts with a reference to the Malatya, Dink and
    Santoro cases and mentions them as previous 'operations,'" said one of
    the plaintiff lawyers, Orhan Kemal Cengiz, adding that a connection
    of the murders with the Cage Plan would be difficult for any court
    to ignore.

    Hearings for Ergenekon are ongoing in Istanbul. Istanbul prosecutors
    handling the Ergenekon case sent a response to the Malatya court this
    month in which they reported they have not been able to find a direct
    connection with the Malatya murders yet. The Malatya court is waiting
    for further investigations into possible connections with Ergenekon.

    Cengiz said that although investigations are moving slowly, he is
    pleased with the willingness of the Malatya prosecutor to cooperate
    and find who is behind the murders.

    "I see a good will on the part of the prosecutor," said Cengiz. "He's
    really trying to discover the possible links, and I'm glad to see
    his effort, and he was helpful and supportive to us. It was important."

    Turkish Christians, Necati Aydin and Ugur Yuksel and German Christian
    Tilmann Geske were tortured and stabbed to death in Malatya on
    April 18, 2007 at Zirve Publishing Co., which distributed Bibles and
    literature in the area.

    Suspects Emre Gunaydin, Salih Gurler, Cuma Ozdemir, Hamit Ceker and
    Abuzer Yildirim, who were caught at the crime scene, are still held
    in prison in Malatya. Two other suspects, journalist Varol Bulent Aral
    and Huseyin Yelki, a former volunteer at Zirve, are not under arrest,
    but the court expects them to attend all hearings.

    Aral and Yelki are believed to have crucial links with the alleged
    masterminds of the murder plot.
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