Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Excavations Dig Deeper Into Ergenekon Structure

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Excavations Dig Deeper Into Ergenekon Structure

    EXCAVATIONS DIG DEEPER INTO ERGENEKON STRUCTURE

    Today's Zaman
    http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.d o?load=detay&link=164048&bolum=101
    Jan 14 2009
    Turkey

    Excavations into sites that are potentially home to Ergenekon arms
    caches continued yesterday.

    Excavations into sites that are potentially home to arms caches of
    Ergenekon, a clandestine organization attempting to create chaos and
    undermine stability in order to trigger a coup d'état, continued
    yesterday, indicating that the investigation is going to deepen,
    with prosecutors reaching more central branches of the organization.

    The police yesterday carried out a series of digs in wasteland around
    the capital in a search for weapons linked to the Ergenekon terrorist
    organization. The excavations are a continuation of earlier digs based
    on new documents obtained during police raids on the houses and offices
    of arrestees last week. Police on Monday discovered several explosives
    and bullets in Ankara in excavations carried out under the auspices
    of the Ergenekon investigation. They unearthed 30 hand grenades,
    nine smoke bombs and hundreds of G-3 rifle bullets in the garden of
    a deserted house in Sincan, an Ankara suburb. The hidden weapons not
    only give clues to the organization's planned attacks in the future,
    but also may shed light on past crimes believed to be committed by
    the organization.

    Yesterday's excavations started out early in the morning in Yenikent,
    an area not far from the site of the cache found in Monday's digs. The
    excavation was briefly halted, as the area is a historical site,
    a status given to it only a week ago, but then was restarted when
    Turkey's Museums and Monuments Directorate gave it the green
    light. Only the Anatolia news agency and the Turkish Radio and
    Television Corporation (TRT) can record footage at the site.

    Meanwhile, an ancient jug was found during yesterday's
    excavation. Archeologists are yet to examine the artifact, officials
    said.

    Lieutenant colonel investigated

    The military started an investigation yesterday into Lt. Col. Mustafa
    Dönmez, an Ergenekon suspect whose houses in Sakarya and Ankara
    were found in last week's operations to contain dozens of bullets,
    hand grenades and weapons. Dönmez, who disappeared last week, turned
    himself into the police yesterday.

    "The legal investigation regarding the suspect and the seized materials
    is continuing in all dimensions," a statement from the military said
    on the inquiry into the army officer.

    A new wave of detentions last week in the Ergenekon investigation
    revealed that the group was planning to assassinate Alevi and Armenian
    community leaders, the prime minister and members of the Supreme
    Court of Appeals, acts that would have dragged Turkey into chaos if
    they had been carried out.

    Thirty-seven individuals were detained last week in simultaneous
    police operations staged in six cities as part of the ongoing
    investigation. The new detainees include military officers, a
    controversial academic with a background of left-wing political
    activism, the former deputy head of the Police Special Operations Unit,
    seven retired generals and the former head of the Higher Education
    Board (YOK). The YOK chairman was released after investigation, but
    four military officers, the controversial academic and the former
    police deputy chief were arrested. Two senior generals were released
    pending trial.

    Information on weapons in GölbaÅ~_ı

    The prosecutors in the case indicated that the police had evidence that
    Ergenekon was plotting to kill prominent Alevi community leaders such
    as Ali Balkız and Kazım Genc, as well as Sivas Armenian Community
    President Minas Durmaz Guler along with a number of journalists.

    Prior to Monday, two separate weapons depots were found during last
    week's operations. On Friday the police discovered a weapons cache
    buried in a forest in Ankara's GölbaÅ~_ı district through a map found
    in the home of one of the newest suspects. Searches in five other areas
    were also launched based on evidence seized by police during sweeps
    of homes and offices of suspects. These searches yielded no results.

    In GölbaÅ~_ı, officers discovered 30 hand grenades, three
    flame-throwers, many plastic explosives, ammunitions for Uzi
    machine guns and other ammunition buried close to a road near the
    capital, officials said. Separately, a weapons cache was found in
    Lt. Col. Dönmez's İstanbul house.

    Weapons found as part of the probe last Friday buried underground in
    Ankara's GölbaÅ~_ı district seem to match assassination plans found
    in the home of Ergenekon suspect and former Special Operations Unit
    Deputy Chief Ä°brahim Å~^ahin.

    Meanwhile the National Intelligence Organization (MÄ°T) yesterday
    confirmed the newspaper reports that Å~^ahin, in his initial testimony
    to judges at the 13th High Criminal Court on Sunday, said he had
    informed MÄ°T about intelligence prior to an Oct. 3 outlawed Kurdistan
    Worker's Party (PKK) attack on a military outpost that left 17 soldiers
    dead. MÄ°T said the agency has no institutional contact with Å~^ahin,
    but said Å~^ahin's intelligence had been carried to the agency through
    "a social interaction."

    --Boundary_(ID_emDRQ7W/TT3d87+ hF7MDtg)--
Working...
X