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Turks Gripped By Shadowy Group's Coup Trials

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  • Turks Gripped By Shadowy Group's Coup Trials

    TURKS GRIPPED BY SHADOWY GROUP'S COUP TRIALS

    National Public Radio (NPR)
    February 16, 2009 Monday

    STEVE INSKEEP, host:
    And I'm Steve Inskeep. Good morning.

    Turkey is witnessing what may be the most important trial in the
    country's history. The subject is the nature of Turkey itself. That's
    because the trial is over an alleged conspiracy to overthrow a
    democratically elected government. That conspiracy allegedly included
    members of the military, and if it's true, such a conspiracy would
    be nothing the military hasn't done before.

    NPR's Deborah Amos reports from Istanbul.

    (Soundbite of whistle blowing)

    DEBORAH AMOS: Thousands march through Istanbul each week to demonstrate
    support for what Turks call the trial of the century.

    (Soundbite of chanting)

    Eighty-six defendants, so far, charged with belonging to a secret
    terrorist organization. Those arrested include retired generals,
    journalists and politicians. The indictment alleges a conspiracy to
    bring down the ruling justice and development party, the AKP. In 2002,
    the AKP won elections for the first time in a landmark vote. The AKP
    is rooted in conservative Islam. The elections unsettled the country's
    secular elite, including the military.

    The coup plot had a name, according to the indictment, with roots in
    Turkish mythology that's come to mean a secret organization within
    the state.

    Mr. MEHMET ALI BIRAND: Ergenekon. It's a bit difficult to swallow,
    but doesn't matter. It's like Ergenekon.

    AMOS: That's Mehmet Ali Birand, a television personality and a
    newspaper columnist. He describes the alleged plot to murder members
    of Turkey's political and cultural elite, setting the stage for a
    military take over.

    Mr. BIRAND: I'm happy that Ergenekon is out of the closet. We knew
    it but we couldn't touch it. For the first time we are discussing
    that the military's involvement in the politics. We are discussing
    that very much.

    AMOS: There is history in this uniquely Turkish story. The country
    has had three successful coups by a military that sees itself as the
    protector of Turkey's secular state, a role that now seems in question,
    says Henri Barkey, a Turkey expert at Pennsylvania's Lehigh University.

    Professor HENRI BARKEY (Lehigh University, Pennsylvania): It has
    diminished and tarnished the military, because so many of its former
    generals are caught up in this thing. So in that sense it is quite
    damning.

    AMOS: I'm standing outside the courtroom where the Ergenekon trials
    take place. The lawyers, and there are many lawyers, arrive by bus
    from Istanbul. There are no cell phones or recording devices allowed
    inside the courtroom. There are two security checks and they are very
    heavy. I'm going inside to hear a case.

    In the wood paneled courtroom, the judges hear the testimony of the
    latest defendant - on this day, a computer programmer charged in the
    plot. There are more than a dozen reporters in the courtroom.

    Mr. COKSAL GOCHE(ph) (Television correspondent): My name is Coksal
    Goche. I'm correspondent for Turkish television.

    AMOS: Goche reports on an indictment so complex and confusing, some
    defendants complain they don't know what they're charged with. But a
    recent opinion poll showed a majority of Turks, 61 percent, believe
    the coup attempt was real, says Goche.

    Mr. GOCHE: Most of the Turkish people think that they are opposite
    of democracy.

    AMOS: The people who were in Ergenekon?

    Mr. GOCHE: Yes. We must solve this problem.

    (Soundbite of beep)

    AMOS: In any conspiracy investigation there seems to be a newspaper
    that digs deeper than the rest. Watergate had the Washington Post. In
    Turkey it's Taraf, a politically liberal newspaper with offices at
    the top floor of a bookstore and an armed guard at the door.

    Yasemin Congar is the lead reporter on Taraf's investigative team.

    Ms. YASEMIN CONGAR (Reporter, Taraf): We are a small newspaper. It's
    a newspaper that created a lot of noise for its size. Some of us have
    received death threats.

    AMOS: Have you personally gotten death threats?

    Ms. CONGAR: In the past, yes.

    AMOS: But in the past, says Congar, investigations into sensitive
    subjects were blocked. For example, the murder of a Turkish-Armenian
    journalist and the harsher aspects of the military campaign against
    Kurdish separatists in the southeast. This is also part of Ergenekon
    says Congar.

    Ms. CONGAR: There is a lot of dirt, there are many corpses, there
    are dead people, and now we're digging it out, and we are finding
    ammunition everywhere, like hand grenades and C-4 exploding devices,
    you name it.

    AMOS: The discovery of several arms dumps and the mounting evidence
    has embarrassed the generals. High-ranking arrests have caused tension
    between the government and the military. And lately, some Turkish
    commentators complain that the trials have gone too far - an attempt by
    the moderate Islamist ruling the country to discredit the secular army
    and silence the secular political oppositions, says Mehmet Ali Birand.

    Mr. MEHMET ALI BIRAND (Turkish television commentator): They are trying
    to push the opposition to this government into a corner, saying that
    - hey, be careful, you can be detained. So that's bad. It's getting
    too far.

    AMOS: So far one Turkish court agreed. A retired four-star general
    was released last week after seven months in jail. The court ruled
    there was not enough evidence to keep him locked up.

    Deborah Amos, NPR News, Istanbul.
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