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  • Military Arrests Raise Political Tensions

    MILITARY ARRESTS RAISE POLITICAL TENSIONS
    Thomas Seibert

    The National
    http://www.thenational.ae/article/2009011 3/FOREIGN/31691776/1135
    Jan 13 2009
    United Arab Emirates

    Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's prime minister, leaves his seat to address
    members of parliament in Ankara. Umit Bektas / Reuters

    ISTANBUL // The high-profile arrest of several serving military
    officers and retired generals in a suspected right-wing plot to bring
    down the government has raised political tensions in Turkey, fuelled by
    opposition accusations that the prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    is using the judicial investigation against the plotters to silence
    his secular critics.

    Rusen Cakir, a columnist with Vatan, a daily newspaper, called
    last week's raids the "most important wave" of arrests yet in the
    so-called Ergenekon investigation. The arrests targeted more than
    30 people in several Turkish provinces, including the army officers
    and former generals as well as a former high-ranking police chief who
    is accused of having planned political murders. It is highly unusual
    for the Turkish police to arrest active or retired military officers.

    Yesterday, a judge in Istanbul charged a nationalist author, Yalcin
    Kucuk, and Mustafa Levent Goktas, a retired colonel, with "membership
    in a terrorist organisation", the Anatolia news agency reported. Both
    were among the 33 people arrested last week. With yesterday's charges,
    the number of people taken into custody after the latest raid rose
    to 15. For the first time in the current investigation, police also
    arrested several serving military officers, four of whom were taken
    into custody.

    Investigators suspect them of involvement in a plot by a right-wing
    group called Ergenekon, which takes its name from the mythical
    home of the Turks in Central Asia and is said to have prepared
    assassinations and attacks to provoke a military coup against Mr
    Erdogan's government. Dozens of suspected Ergenekon members have been
    on trial in Istanbul since last autumn.

    After the latest raids, police put dozens of handguns, automatic
    rifles and hand grenades on public display.

    The Ergenekon investigation has also turned into a major battleground
    in a political power struggle between Mr Erdogan and his secular
    critics, who accuse the prime minister and his ruling Justice and
    Development Party, or AKP, of pursuing an Islamist agenda and of
    trying to silence critics.

    "The AKP has declared war on the republic by using the judiciary,"
    said Kemal Kilicdaroglu, a leading member of the Republican People's
    Party, or CHP, a secular party and the main opposition group in
    Ankara. The CHP leader, Deniz Baykal, said the AKP was creating an
    "empire of fear" with the Ergenekon investigation.

    Coming 18 months after law enforcement authorities in Istanbul
    unearthed a weapons cache in Istanbul, an event that marked the
    beginning of the Ergenekon case, the investigation reached its highest
    level last week with the arrest of Gen Tuncer Kilinc, a retired
    army general and a former general secretary of the powerful National
    Security Council in Ankara, a key institution used by the military
    to influence Turkish politics.

    Gen Kilinc and two other former generals were released and another
    retired soldier was taken into custody, awaiting trial. One of the
    ex-generals, Gen Erdal Sener, was told not to leave the country.

    Shortly after the arrests, Turkey's general chief of staff, Gen
    Ilker Basbug, met Mr Erdogan to voice his unease about the way Gen
    Kilinc and the other former generals had been treated, press reports
    said. Such warnings by the military leadership set off alarm bells
    in a country where the military has ousted four governments since 1960.

    At the same time that Gen Kilinc and the other soldiers were arrested,
    investigators picked up Ibrahim Sahin, the former deputy head of
    a special operations unit of the police, who had been convicted
    several years ago for involvement in a scandal involving the police
    and right-wing organised gangs.

    The media reported that police found a list of assassination targets
    alleged to have belonged to Mr Sahin. It included the brother
    of the writer and Nobel laureate, Orhan Pamuk, a hate figure for
    Turkish nationalists, and the patriarch of the Armenian Church,
    Mesrob Mutafyan. Mr Sahin, who was taken into custody last weekend,
    denied the charges, news reports said. But newspapers also reported
    that associates of Mr Sahin were accused of a plot to kill a member
    of the small Armenian community in the Anatolian town of Sivas.

    Mr Baykal and other critics concede that accusations against some
    of the Ergenekon suspects may turn out to be significant. "It is
    cowardice not to put Ibrahim Sahin, people like that, the gangs, on
    trial," Mr Baykal told Milliyet, a daily newspaper. But he added that
    so far every wave of arrests in the Ergenekon case had also targeted
    honourable citizens who happen to be critics of the government,
    in an apparent effort to create a connection between these two
    groups. "[T]his is a matter of political planning."

    During the arrests last week, investigators also searched the house
    of Sabih Kanadoglu, a retired prosecutor general and a leading
    legal expert of Turkish secularists, though he was not arrested,
    while Kemal Guruz, a former president of Turkey's higher education
    board and a prominent opponent of the government, was arrested,
    then released. "This is a psychological operation," Mr Baykal said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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