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ANKARA: Euro Parliament Wants Deeper Probe Into Ergenekon

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  • ANKARA: Euro Parliament Wants Deeper Probe Into Ergenekon

    EURO PARLIAMENT WANTS DEEPER PROBE INTO ERGENEKON

    Today's Zaman
    Feb 13 2009
    Turkey

    European lawmakers have urged Turkey to seriously focus on the
    Ergenekon network's probable role in unresolved murders, including
    the assassination of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink in
    January 2007.

    Ergenekon, a neo-nationalist group accused of involvement in plans
    to stage a violent uprising against the government, was discovered at
    the end of an investigation that came upon the heels of a police raid
    in June 2007 that uncovered an arms depot in a house in Ä°stanbul's
    Umraniye district. The prosecutor in the Ergenekon case has said the
    group worked to create disorder and chaos through various violent acts
    so that the public would be willing to accept a military intervention
    to restore order.

    The group is suspected of involvement in the murder of three Christian
    missionaries in Malatya in 2007; the 2006 murder of a priest in the
    northern city of Trabzon; the murder of Dink, editor-in-chief of the
    bilingual Agos newspaper in 2007; a 2006 attack on the Council of
    State; and a grenade attack on the Cumhuriyet daily in 2006.

    Members of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the European Parliament
    on Wednesday adopted the draft for Parliament's annual resolution
    on Turkey's progress toward European Union accession, which was
    drawn up by Dutch Christian Democrat European Parliamentarian Ria
    Oomen-Ruijten. The resolution was adopted by 65 votes to one, with
    four abstentions.

    The European Parliament "welcomes the beginning of the trial against
    those accused of being members of the Ergenekon criminal organization;
    encourages the authorities to continue investigations and to fully
    uncover the organization's networks which reach into the state
    structures; is concerned about reports regarding the treatment of
    defendants in this case; urges the Turkish authorities to provide
    them with a fair trial and to adhere strictly to the principles of
    the rule of law," the report said.

    The committee approved an amendment to add a sentence to this paragraph
    saying, "While assessing unresolved cases such as the killing of
    Hrant Dink, the thesis suggesting that Ergenekon has a role in these
    incidents should be taken more seriously," the Anatolia news agency
    reported.

    The EU member states should consider starting accession talks with
    Turkey in areas where the country meets technical criteria set by the
    EU, the committee also said. The recommendation did not feature in
    the original draft resolution put forward by Oomen-Ruijten, however,
    it emerged as a compromise amendment by center-left deputies. The
    final resolution called on member states "to consider making progress
    on opening of negotiations on chapters in which Turkey, according
    to the European Commission's assessment, fulfilled the conditions
    for opening."

    Ankara must commit itself to a lasting settlement of the Kurdish
    issue, the committee also said. This will require better economic and
    social integration of citizens of Kurdish origin, including offering
    them real opportunities to learn Kurdish in the public and private
    schooling system and to use it in broadcasting, in daily life and in
    access to public services, it said, while welcoming the government's
    launch of a 24-hour Kurdish-language TV channel on the state-owned
    Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (TRT) on Jan. 1.
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