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ANKARA: Ergenekon suspect to give testimony in Malatya murder case

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  • ANKARA: Ergenekon suspect to give testimony in Malatya murder case

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 17 2009


    Ergenekon suspect to give testimony in Malatya murder case



    Ergün Poyraz, a journalist known for his controversial writing,
    was detained by counterterrorism teams in late July 2007 on suspicion
    of having links to the Association for the Union of Patriotic Forces
    (VKGB)
    The co-plaintiff lawyers in the brutal murders of three Christians in
    a Malatya publishing house in 2007 have requested that one of the
    suspects arrested in 2007 as part of an operation into Ergenekon, a
    shadowy crime network that has alleged links within the state, testify
    in court as a witness in the Malatya murder case.

    The Ergenekon suspect in question, Ergün Poyraz, a journalist
    known for his controversial writing, was detained by counterterrorism
    teams in late July 2007 on suspicion of having links to the
    Association for the Union of Patriotic Forces (VKGB), a gang whose
    members include retired army members and which is believed to have
    connections not only to petty crime but also to acts aimed at stirring
    political tension and inciting chaos. He was later arrested and put in
    jail.

    The 14th hearing of the Malatya case was held yesterday at the Malatya
    3rd High Criminal Court.

    Ergenekon is a behind-the-scenes network attempting to use social and
    psychological engineering to shape the country in accordance with its
    own ultranationalist ideology. The group is suspected not only in the
    Malatya murder case, but also in various other attacks and
    assassinations, including the killing of Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink in early 2007. In November, the judge presiding over the Malatya
    murder case announced that the indictment against Ergenekon was merged
    with the Malatya murder case. The decision marked an important step in
    the trial, during which lawyers representing the victims' families had
    continuously insisted that the murder of the three Christians was not
    simply a hate crime, but something that goes much deeper.

    Recent evidence collected in the Ergenekon investigation also
    suggested that the brutal killings might have been organized by
    Ergenekon, which is suspected of a large number of murders and
    bombings aimed at creating chaos in the country to serve the
    organization's ultimate purpose of overthrowing the government.

    The court adjourned the case to Feb. 20 in order to make the
    procedural preparations for Poyraz's testimony.

    On April 18, 2007, Necati Aydın (35), UÄ?ur Yüksel
    and German national Tilmann Ekkehart Geske (46) were tied to their
    chairs, tortured and stabbed at the Zirve publishing house in the
    eastern Anatolian city of Malatya before their throats were slit. The
    publishing house they worked for printed Bibles and Christian
    literature. Suspects S.G., C.Ã-., H.T. and A.Y., whose full names
    were not disclosed because of their ages, were caught at the crime
    scene and immediately taken into custody. The main suspect, Emre
    Günaydın, jumped from a third-story window while
    attempting to escape from police and was taken into custody after a
    hospital stay.


    17 January 2009, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH WIRES Ä°STANBUL
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