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ANKARA: Ex-PM Says Illegality In 90s Created Ergenekon

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  • ANKARA: Ex-PM Says Illegality In 90s Created Ergenekon

    EX-PM SAYS ILLEGALITY IN 90S CREATED ERGENEKON

    Hurriyet
    Jan 15 2009
    Turkey

    ANKARA - A former prime minister has admitted that Turkey used
    illegal methods in its fight against terrorism during the 1990s and
    that today's Ergenekon investigation could be seen as a consequence
    of those actions.

    During a television show late Tuesday, the former prime minister and
    Rize independent deputy, Mesut Yılmaz, said: "We accept today that
    no political agenda can justify acts of terrorism. What we still
    could not agree on, however, was that the rule of law could not be
    cast aside. Illegal anti-terror operations caused corruption in the
    institutions that ignored it, and people employed for those purposes
    became the scourge of the state," Yılmaz said.

    The use of illegal operations was due to practical needs, he
    said. Police formed a special unit to use against the Armenian Secret
    Army for the Liberation of Armenia, or ASALA (a terrorist group that
    killed more than 40 Turkish diplomats and their family members),
    he said.

    "That unit is the core of the group of people that we are now dealing
    with. They were 40 or 50 at the beginning. They received special
    training and sent to foreign countries. ASALA was dismantled, but
    then the terrorist (outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party) PKK started
    in 1990s," Yılmaz said. "Then the government, under Prime Minister
    Tansu Ciller, in 1993 and 1994 reorganized these units under the
    Special Operations Unit. The illegal movements of some anti-terror
    members were known to the state, but "those institutions, including
    the government, that supported them for legitimate purposes did not
    want to compromise them." Yılmaz was the leader of the Motherland
    Party until 2002 and prime minister for brief intervals in 1991, 1996,
    and between 1997 and 1999. Yılmaz also sounded pessimistic about
    the outcome of the Ergenekon case. Susurluk was an apparent incident,
    whereas Ergenekon is an ambiguous concept, he said.

    "People are held in custody for 10 months without any concrete charges
    against them. I do not think anything of value will emerge from this,"
    Yılmaz said.

    --Boundary_(ID_6xCG716OkNkAb/IqTjyn/g)--
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