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ANKARA: Key Ergenekon Suspect Says Military Hired Him

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  • ANKARA: Key Ergenekon Suspect Says Military Hired Him

    KEY ERGENEKON SUSPECT SAYS MILITARY HIRED HIM

    Hurriyet
    Jan 13 2009
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL - A former police chief and suspect in the trial of the
    alleged Ergenekon gang told an Istanbul court Sunday that the military
    had called on him to form a 300-strong anti-terror team and collect
    information on Armenians in Turkey.

    Ä°brahim Å~^ahin, who had previously been convicted of forming and
    heading a criminal gang in 2000, used to be the acting head of the
    anti-terror squad in the 1990s and was convicted when his illicit
    relations with the mafia came to light during the Susurluk scandal. Of
    the 33 people detained last Wednesday, Å~^ahin was one of 17 to be
    charged by the court over the weekend.

    Among those charged along with Å~^ahin, were socialist writer Yalcın
    Kucuk, two colonels, one retired colonel and two lieutenants, as
    well as former Higher Education Board, or YOK, president Kemal Guruz,
    retired generals Kemal Yavuz and Tuncer Kılınc and the son of former
    Istanbul Mayor Bedrettin Dalan.

    The charges involve membership in a criminal gang accused of
    plotting to overthrow the government. The media has called the
    gang Ergenekon, which comes from a legend of the same name. As the
    legend goes, pre-Islamic Turks were able to recuperate from a heavy
    defeat to overcome their enemies under the guidance and cunning of
    a gray wolf. Most of those arrested or charged are known for their
    nationalistic sympathies.

    The Ergenekon case started after the discovery of 27 hand grenades
    in June 2007 in a shanty house in Istanbul's Umraniye district that
    belonged to a retired noncommissioned officer. The grenades were
    found to be the same as those used in the attacks on Cumhuriyet
    daily's Istanbul offices in 2006.

    The findings led to scores of detentions, putting more than 100
    journalists, writers, gang leaders and politicians under arrest. The
    alleged gang is accused of trying to instigate the military to topple
    the government in 2009 by initially spreading chaos and mayhem.

    The earlier bombings of daily Cumhuriyet, the murder of journalist
    Hrant Dink, the murder of a top judge of the Council of State and
    the alleged plans for the assassination of high-profile figures in
    Turkish politics are sometimes associated with the case.

    The list of detainees includes retired generals Å~^ener Eruygur and
    HurÅ~_id Tolon and retired Maj. Gen. Veli Kucuk. Many detainees
    are retired officials who gathered in associations linked to the
    ultra-nationalist Kuvayi Milliye (National Forces) Ä~^ a reference
    to irregular forces that led the Turkish war for independence back
    in the early 1920s.

    Å~^ahin says it is his official duty Å~^ahin, in his testimony to
    the prosecutors and the court over the weekend, said he was invited
    to a meeting with the Chief of General Staff three months ago by
    Lieut. Gen. Bekir Kalyoncu, the current commander of the seventh corps
    based in Diyarbakır in the southeast. There he was told to form a
    300-strong anti-terror team and would be appointed undersecretary
    of a new intelligence department. "I prepared a list of 300 former
    anti-terror officers and that is the list found in my home," Å~^ahin
    told the court.

    He was told to conduct an investigation on Armenians in the central
    Anatolian Sivas and Kayseri provinces.

    When asked about his relationship with another suspect, Fatma Cengiz,
    he said Cengiz had given him intelligence about Armenians working
    for the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party, or DTP.

    He also denied ownership of the map found in his home that led police
    to a large buried weapons cache. "If it is checked, you will realize
    the writing on it is not mine," he said. If it were up to him, he
    would not have hidden the weapons in GölbaÅ~_ı, where it was found,
    but in less conspicuous Elmadag nearby.

    Å~^ahin was seen as one of the rising princes of Mehmet Agar, a former
    police chief and interior minister, and was appointed as the acting
    head of the police anti-terrorism squad in 1993.

    He established the police department's Special Forces School, graduates
    of which formed the basis of later anti-terror squads.

    After the Susurluk accident in November 1996, when a right-wing
    mafia leader, a police chief and a former beauty queen died and a
    parliamentarian was severely injured, his descent began. The Susurluk
    scandal showed illicit links between the mafia, police and politicians,
    with Å~^ahin's anti-terrorism squad implicated.

    Newspapers later printed photos of Å~^ahin together with the fugitive
    right-wing militant and mafia boss Abdullah Catlı, who died in
    the accident.

    He was suspended and then investigated for protecting anti-terror
    squad members implicated in the murder of Omer Lutfu Topal, who owned
    gambling establishments, and the kidnapping of National Intelligence
    Agency, or MİT, officer Tarık Umit.

    When a court ordered his arrest, he fled before surrendering and then
    serving six months in jail. He was released in September 1997.

    He was again charged in March 1999 in connection with weapons given
    to the police department that had gone missing.

    In 2000, he was severely injured in a traffic accident and he was still
    in hospital when he was sentenced to a year in jail for dereliction
    of duty.

    He was also found guilty in the so-called Susurluk case, found guilty
    of forming and leading a criminal gang together with former MÄ°T
    member Korkut Eken, each being sentenced to six years in jail.

    He was pardoned in August 2002 due to bad health. There were also
    photos of him showing his close relationship with retired Maj. Muzaffer
    Tekin, who is also currently being tried in connection to the so-called
    Ergenekon gang.

    Eken, a former MÄ°T member and retired lieutenant colonel, told
    daily Hurriyet over the weekend that he could not understand how an
    experienced person could leave the map of a weapons cache at home to
    be found.

    Eken, who worked as a teacher at the Special Forces School in the
    1990s, also said the weapons found by police were not linked to the
    missing weapons in the Susurluk case. "Those were sent overseas for
    an operation. There were 10 guns. However, with the advent of the
    Susurluk case, we couldn't bring the weapons back."

    He said he still could not understand why Å~^ahin was convicted and
    sentenced to six years in the Susurluk case. He served 2.5 years in
    jail before being released.

    PM defends probe

    Last October, 86 people went on trial, accused of belonging to a
    terrorist organization and of plotting to topple the ruling Justice
    and Development Party, or AKP, government. The trial will expand to
    include suspects retired generals Eruygur, and retired Major Gen. Kucuk
    and the others.

    The probe initially received support for countering the so-called
    "deep state," a term used to describe security forces acting outside
    the law, often in collusion with illegal factions, to protect what
    they see as Turkey's best interests.

    But the probe's credibility has been increasingly questioned after
    it began targeting journalists, academics, intellectuals and retired
    generals who are all known to be vocal government critics. Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan Sunday called on the Republican
    People's Party, or CHP, which has been critical of the probe, to let
    investigators do their work. "There are in this country magistrates
    and prosecutors who have a free conscience," he said. "Nobody should
    think of themselves above justice," he told a party meet.

    Cicek denies

    Deputy Prime Minister Cemil Cicek said yesterday he had no knowledge of
    Ä°brahin Å~^ahin being offered to head the new anti-terror department.

    In response to questions during a remembrance ceremony held
    in Parliament for former Labor Minister Necati Celik who died
    Sunday, Cicek said: "That's his testimony. We can't know if it
    is true." Å~^ahin told a court that senior military officers had
    approached him three months ago.

    They asked him to form an anti-terrorism squad and told him that
    he would head it, Å~^ahin said. Cicek, spaeking after a Cabinet
    meeting two weeks ago, said the government would be forming a new
    anti-terrorism department. The Office of the Chief of General Staff
    released a statement yesterday, dismissing Å~^ahin's claim that the
    military had offered him the head of the new anti-terror department.

    --Boundary_(ID_zpqEIG91MyGWfCfZbmVdtA )--
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