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ANKARA: Explosive claims from key Ergenekon suspect

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  • ANKARA: Explosive claims from key Ergenekon suspect

    EXPLOSIVE CLAIMS FROM KEY ERGENEKON SUSPECT

    Hurriyet
    Feb 12 2009
    Turkey

    ANKARA - Ergenekon suspect Ä°brahim Å~^ahin named the Chief of Staff
    General Ä°lker BaÅ~_bug as the man behind the new anti-terror unit he
    would be asked to head, according to details of his testimony revealed
    yesterday. Air force command proceeded with its own investigation

    A former police special operations officer caught in a recent Ergenekon
    raid has claimed that Chief of General Staff Gen. Ä°lker BaÅ~_bug was
    aware the ex-police officer was asked to head up a new anti-terror
    unit, daily Radikal reported yesterday.

    Soon after ex-police special operations deputy chief, Ä°brahim Å~^ahin,
    was arrested police found a map in his house that led them to a hidden
    weapons cache. They also discovered a list containing names of many
    police and military officers, some also indicted in the Ergenekon case,
    which police have used to connect Å~^ahin to the alleged gang. Å~^ahin
    has maintained the list was in relation to the new clandestine unit
    he was instructed to form. Military officials have consistently
    denied any such instructions were given.Å~^ahin's text messages,
    electronically monitored by police, mentioned a "Bug Pasha."

    "My Bug pasha knows, they must be hundred percent reliable," read
    one message sent to another detained Ergenekon suspect, Lt. Taylan
    Ozgur Kırmızı. "I was told that the president, as well as the
    Interior Minister BeÅ~_ir Atalay, signed the order to create a new
    unit," Å~^ahin told the prosecutor, Zekeriya Oz. Å~^ahin said he was
    to be appointed head of "S-1" on Jan. 12 in a ceremony had he not
    been detained.

    A document titled "to my honorable Chief of Staff" was also recovered
    from Å~^ahin's house, which according to Å~^ahin was to be offered
    to the General Staff during the ceremony.

    The General Staff has denied Å~^ahin's testimony, with a written
    statement released Jan. 12. Deputy Prime Minister Cemil Cicek has
    also denied any offer to Å~^ahin was ever made.

    Meanwhile, the Air Force Command has denied that six of the seven
    people arrested yesterday and Tuesday were active duty officers,
    contrary to first reports.

    The Workers' Party, or Ä°P's, deputy leader, Mehmet Bedri Gultekin,
    was among those arrested after the Air Force Command began an
    investigation into claims of "Headquarter Houses" that brought
    together Ä°P members and military officers on duty, according to
    the Ergenekon indictment. Ä°P vice-chair, Hasan Basri Ozbey, said
    the military prosecutor merely wanted to consult Gultekin and said
    "Headquarter Houses" was a sheer lie.

    Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Å~^ahin rejected that the courts were
    divided in their allegiance, commenting on voice recordings attributed
    to the wife of retired Gen. Å~^ener Eruygur, Mukaddes Eruygur, who
    said the 12th and 14th courts were "on their side." The 12th Court
    took the decision to release retired Gen. HurÅ~_it Tolon, who had
    been under arrest in the Ergenekon case for seven months."Such an
    impression casts a shadow on justice," Minister Å~^ahin said, but
    added that he was not sure whether the voice recording was real or not.

    In the voice recordings, Mrs. Eruygur is heard speaking to Col. Nusret
    Demircan, the head of GATA Military Hospital Brain Surgery unit,
    and asking the military doctor whether her husband would be arrested
    again if he were released. A part of the record reveals that retired
    Gen. Eruygur, arrested but released due to health problems, was indeed
    in good health.

    Arrested in January, ex-police officer Å~^ahin gave detailed
    information to prosecutor Zekeriya Oz about the proposal, according
    to details of his testimony. Å~^ahin, who suffered brain damage
    after a traffic accident in 2000, had pointed the finger at the
    General Staff's press information chief, Brig. Gen. Metin Gurak, as
    the general who gave him orders to designate personnel for the new
    "S-1" anti-terror unit and said he was told to select trustworthy
    military men and police.

    A list titled "S-1" was found during a search of Å~^ahin's house and
    featured several hundred policemen and soldiers already under arrest
    in the Ergenekon case.

    Å~^ahin also said he participated in regular meetings with the General
    Staff. "Metin Gurak, whom I refer to as BaÅ~_bug Pasha's number one,
    called me from an unknown number," he said.

    The organization Å~^ahin was setting up would be responsible for
    "cleaning out the interior of Turkey," according to Å~^ahin's own
    voice in a conversation recorded by police.

    "The interior and exterior, relating to northern Iraq. Metin Gurak
    told me that all members would be Turks," Å~^ahin had told Oz.

    Å~^ahin left a bulk of questions unanswered about death lists,
    indexes and house plans of non-Muslim and Alevi religious leaders'
    houses. He did not give information on the "Safir," which was referred
    to as an organization within the military in his conversations with
    Cengiz. In most of the conversations, Oz asked Å~^ahin about Fatma
    Cengiz, an officer at the Kayseri Airborne Infantry Command who was
    sent to jail after a later wave of Ergenekon arrests.

    "Asena sit. A duty arrives. The Armenian must be killed," read a text
    message he sent to Cengiz, presumably against the Armenian community
    leader in Sivas, Minas Duran Guler, whom Å~^ahin tracked. Å~^ahin
    did not elaborate on frequent hate speeches against non-Muslims in
    his conversations.

    Å~^ahin was convicted in 2000 as he was hospitalized for breach of duty
    that led to the disappearance of weapons in the Susurluk scandal. He
    was pardoned by former President Ahmet Necdet Sezer in 2002 when he
    was diagnosed with memory loss.

    Release Ozbek say unions

    Ergenekon drew widespread international reaction yesterday. Industry
    workers' unions from Moldova, Ukraine, Belarus, Russia, Kazakhstan,
    Macedonia, Kyrgyzstan and the semi-autonomous regions of Gagauzia and
    Bashkortostan, as well as the International Eurasian Metal Workers'
    Union, presided by an Ergenekon suspect currently under arrest,
    Mustafa Ozbek, asked "independent Turkish courts" to release the
    "patriotic and well-known" union leader.

    The Ergenekon case officially started when police discovered 27
    grenades in a shanty house belonging to a retired noncommissioned
    officer in Istanbul in June 2007.

    Prosecutors have alleged there is a secret ultra-nationalist group
    made up of retired and active military officers, writers, unionists
    and journalists who want to spread nationalist violence and overthrow
    the government by provoking a coup.

    Most of the Ergenekon indictment, some 2,500 pages long, is based
    on six sacks of documents about an organization called "Ergenekon"
    discovered in 2001 at the house of Tuncay Guney, a controversial figure
    arrested for petty fraud but released soon afterward. Guney now lives
    in Canada. The Ergenekon case is shrouded in a mist of controversy with
    opposition parties claiming the ruling Justice and Development Party,
    or AKP, is exploiting the case to suppress secular opposition. Serious
    criticism abounds concerning the arrests and detentions that violate
    the code of criminal procedure, according to some jurists.
    --Boundary_(ID_HrTrI/om2lPJR8HzP/aeOQ)--
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