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  • ANKARA: 'Search Of Generals' Homes Lasted Only Minutes'

    'SEARCH OF GENERALS' HOMES LASTED ONLY MINUTES'

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 13 2009
    Turkey

    The searches inside the homes of two senior generals detained in last
    week's police operations into the Ergenekon terrorist organization
    were completed in nearly 10 minutes, sources at the scene have said.

    Last week, 33 individuals, including retired senior generals Tuncer
    Kılınc and Erdal Å~^enel, were detained as part of the ongoing
    investigation into Ergenekon, whose members are accused of various
    bombings, killings and other sensational unrest, apparently staged in
    the hopes of triggering a coup d'etat against the government. The two
    generals' houses at a residential complex belonging to the military
    were also searched during last week's operations.

    The two generals' homes were not searched by the police but by
    a military prosecutor and a civilian prosecutor from a higher
    criminal court. The police were not allowed inside the buildings,
    and the prosecutors were let in two and a half hours after their
    arrival. Similarly, sources said, the police were not allowed into
    the house of Lt. Col. Mustafa Dönmez, who turned himself in to the
    police yesterday evening. Meanwhile, police have established that the
    lieutenant colonel, who stayed a fugitive until yesterday evening,
    was at the Land Forces Command at the time of the search of his
    house. During last week's searches, a cache of arms was found in the
    lieutenant colonel's other house in Ankara's Sincan district. Nothing
    was found in his house in the military residential complex.

    The police, who had been monitoring Dönmez's phone conversations
    for months, also established that Dönmez received a phone call from
    an unidentified individual who said, "Where are you? The police
    are looking for you." Dönmez then replied, "OK, I'm on my way,"
    but then vanished only to reappear yesterday. Dönmez was sent to
    Metris Prison immediately, over charges of being in possession of
    firearms registered to the military.

    Police not allowed in

    Five prosecutors were assigned by the Ankara Public Prosecutor's
    Office in last week's operations. The home of former Supreme Court
    of Appeals Chief Prosecutor Sabih Kanadoglu was also searched, but
    the search could not start for hours because of the inadequate number
    of prosecutors.

    In the retired general suspects' homes, the police arrived at 7 a.m.,
    but Central Command allowed the search warrant to be issued only
    at 9:30 a.m. Officials from Central Command also allowed only one
    authorized prosecutor in. Nothing was found inside the house during
    the nearly 10-minute searches, the prosecutors reported. The average
    search time in last week's operations in the houses of non-military
    suspects was six hours.

    Central Command looking for mole

    Meanwhile, news stories about an alleged special order from Central
    Command's Special Protection Battalion Command to all military
    residential complexes not to let police officers inside have caused
    Central Command to start an investigation into the source of the
    leak. Military sources say every military officer serving at the
    command was questioned during the investigation and that nobody was
    allowed outside during the weekend, one day after the news piece
    appeared in the national press.

    Ä°brahim Å~^ahin knew about police monitoring

    Recent evidence suggests that Ä°brahim Å~^ahin, a former senior police
    official who was the deputy head of the National Police Department's
    Special Operations Unit, knew about the police investigation about
    him and that he was aware that his phone conversations were being
    monitored. In a transcript of a phone conversation between him and
    a military officer who is currently on duty in the army, Å~^ahin
    says, "These uncles are after me," using slang to refer to National
    Intelligence Organization (MÄ°T) agents.

    Å~^ahin is accused of plotting to kill Armenian and Alevi leaders
    based on documents found in his home. The documents showed that the
    suspects have done extensive intelligence research on the targets
    they planned to assassinate.

    --Boundary_(ID_BOtz2cP6D5s5Ti79bm1qn w)--
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