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ANKARA: 7 Detained As Part Of Investigation Into TSK Covert Meeting

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  • ANKARA: 7 Detained As Part Of Investigation Into TSK Covert Meeting

    7 DETAINED AS PART OF INVESTIGATION INTO TSK COVERT MEETING SPOTS

    Today's Zaman
    Feb 12 2009
    Turkey

    Twelve people, including five military officers, were detained on
    Tuesday as part of an investigation launched by the Air Forces Command
    into the secret meeting places of a clandestine terrorist organization.

    These covert meeting places, also known as Karargah houses, were used
    by members of the Ergenekon terrorist group for discussing strategic
    plans to manipulate the decisions of the Turkish Armed Forces
    (TSK). Ergenekon is a clandestine criminal organization charged
    with attempting to create chaos and undermine stability in Turkey
    to trigger a coup. Eighty-six of its alleged members are in jail and
    standing trial. Many other suspects are waiting to be indicted.

    The existence of the Karargah houses was revealed as part of the
    ongoing Ergenekon investigation. These places are believed to be
    meeting spots for army generals plotting a coup as well as locations
    for hiding hit men and ammunition.

    The Air Forces Command launched an investigation into the Karargah
    houses around two years ago. Seven people, five of whom were army
    officers on active duty, were taken into custody on Tuesday for
    suspected ties to these houses. The detentions came upon an order by
    a military prosecutor, a move that seems to strengthen claims that
    the military is determined to get rid of illegal formations within
    its ranks.

    Many retired and active military members, including high-ranking
    generals and officers, have been detained and arrested as part of
    the Ergenekon investigation.

    Workers' Party (Ä°P) Vice Chairman Mehmet Bedri Gultekin and
    businessman Ä°brahim Arslan were also among those detained on
    Tuesday. Ä°P Chairman Dogu Perincek and Secretary-General Nusret
    Senem are currently in jail for their suspected involvement in
    Ergenekon. Their party is known for its extreme nationalism despite
    its left-wing roots. Documents seized during police raids on Ä°P
    offices revealed close ties between the Ä°P and Ergenekon.

    The names of officers detained on Tuesday have not been made
    public. Rumors are circulating, however, that the number of detainees
    may increase in the days ahead.

    Meanwhile, the Ergenekon prosecutors have not been able to obtain
    satisfactory answers from Ergenekon suspect Ä°brahim Å~^ahin, a
    former deputy director of the National Police Department's Special
    Operations Unit, who was arrested last week on charges of having
    established death squads with police force members to assassinate
    prominent intellectuals, businessman and non-Muslim community leaders
    in various cities across the country. The answers prosecutors have
    gotten so far have led to even more questions.

    In his testimony Å~^ahin said the squads he was forming inside
    the police force, known as S-1 squads, were being created with the
    knowledge of Chief of General Staff Gen. Ä°lker BaÅ~_bug. Å~^ahin
    further claimed that the S-1 department was to be formed of 150 to 300
    police officers and soldiers, under the orders of Brig. Gen. Metin
    Gurak, head of the General Staff Communications Department. He also
    said the highest-ranking generals in the army had contacted him about
    the S-1 teams, but that their phone numbers never appeared on his
    telephone's caller ID screen. Although Å~^ahin gave detailed answers
    to many questions, he left many others completely unanswered.

    In his 107-page testimony taken by Prosecutor Zekeriya Oz, Å~^ahin
    admitted having compiled the S-1 lists found in his home during police
    raids last year. He claimed that Gen. Gurak personally ordered him to
    set up a new team. "I made a list of people I knew who had fought in
    counterterrorism campaigns. I was told that this issue was ordered
    by the president and Interior Minister BeÅ~_ir Atalay. I knew they
    had official contacts regarding this team," he testified. He also
    claimed that he had regular meetings with gen. Gurak. "I always saw
    Gurak PaÅ~_a regularly until I was taken here. They told me to prepare
    things. I have compiled the lists in accordance with their orders."

    Who is the 'highest up'?

    Å~^ahin did not give any response to a question about who he had
    referred to as "the highest up" in a phone conversation he had with
    Fatma Cengiz on Nov. 2, 2008. Cengiz was arrested as an Ergenekon
    suspect in January. In the same conversation Å~^ahin and Cengiz talked
    about an organization they called Sefir. In response to Oz's question
    about this organization, Å~^ahin also gave no answer.

    In another phone conversation from Nov. 18, 2008, Å~^ahin told Oguzhan
    Sagıroglu, another Ergenekon suspect, "We are responsible for inner
    cleansing." In response to the prosecutor's question, Å~^ahin said
    he meant inner cleansing in northern Iraq.

    Å~^ahin also told the prosecution that if he had not been detained
    in the Ergenekon investigation, there would have been a military
    ceremony for him at General Staff headquarters on Jan. 12, to mark
    his new duty as head of the S-1 teams.

    A document listing intellectuals and individuals of Armenian
    background or found "dangerous to state security" had been found
    both in the homes of both Å~^ahin and Cengiz. The document lists
    the names of publisher Ragıp Zarakolu, Professor Halil Berktay,
    historian Taner Akcam, politician Hikmet Cetin, former National
    Intelligence Organization (MÄ°T) Deputy Undersecretary Mehmet Eymur,
    journalist and author Murat Belge, journalist Oral CalıÅ~_lar and
    Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew, Syriac Catholic Community leader
    Yusuf Sag and former Vatican representative George Marovic. Å~^ahin
    also refused to respond to questions about documents indicating that
    he was gathering intelligence on individuals of Armenian, Alevi and
    Kurdish origin. Other questions about Å~^ahin's racist and violent
    remarks about Kurds, Alevis and Armenians in letters, emails and
    phone conversations went unanswered.

    He also denied that a map found in his home that led the police to a
    stockpile of munitions buried underground in an Ankara neighborhood
    belonged to him.
    --Boundary_(ID_HJUhedHpcs1mTRtfGlnwrA)--
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