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ANKARA: Ergenekon Investigation And The Noise It Creates

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  • ANKARA: Ergenekon Investigation And The Noise It Creates

    ERGENEKON INVESTIGATION AND THE NOISE IT CREATES
    By Mumtazer Turkone

    Journal of Turkish Weekly
    Jan 20 2009
    Turkey

    The Ergenekon earthquake continues with new tremors. Sometimes it
    reminds us of a horror film. The sort of chaos and commotion Turkey
    might have faced if the weapons and bombs dug up from the underground
    repositories had been used is just a small scene from this horror show.

    Occasionally, it rekindles political confrontations. Republican
    People's Party (CHP) leader Deniz Baykal has been waging
    a comprehensive opposition campaign against the Ergenekon
    investigation. From time to time, it becomes a comedy. In particular,
    the people who attempt to defend Ergenekon with political arguments
    have been producing funny arguments.

    Deniz Som, a columnist at the Cumhuriyet newspaper, is an advocate of
    the Ergenekon organization, and we had a brief discussion on a live
    broadcast TV program. I hesitated before deciding whether I should
    laugh at or be offended by the arguments he suggested. The previous
    day, bags full of bullets and hand grenades were left on streets or
    deserted spots in many places around the country. It seems that these
    bags were later reported to the police by those who left them. This
    is a frequently seen case, and I described it as the disintegration
    phase of the Ergenekon terrorist organization. The members of the
    organization who had stored weapons and ammunition were discarding
    them. Som had a different perspective. To him, these weapons and
    ammunition had been taken as keepsakes by people who had completed
    their compulsory military service. In short, he called them "military
    service souvenirs." This explanation fits in well with Turks' sense of
    humor. The military penal code has heavy penalties for taking equipment
    outside of military facilities. In the case of weapons and ammunition,
    these penalties are more severe.

    Tactical wars

    A headline the Cumhuriyet newspaper ran several days ago about
    the weapons and ammunition unearthed crossed the thin line between
    tragedy and comedy. After numerous weapons and bombs were dug up
    in the courtyard of the house of a lieutenant colonel, the paper
    ran the headline "Excavation revealed history." The news story opts
    to report the incident as follows: The area where the weapons and
    ammunition were stored is an officially designated archaeological
    zone. While the search was being conducted according to a sketch,
    an ancient water jug was also discovered. Next to weapons and bombs
    that were sufficient to create bloodshed in Turkey, a water jug was
    found. The Cumhuriyet newspaper preferred to devote its headline
    to the jug, not the weapons. Even Pravda, the official paper of the
    Soviet Union, could not have gone so far in distorting news according
    to the communist ideology.

    In the short term, if the Ergenekon investigation can be successfully
    completed and the Turkish counter-guerrilla is purged, this will be
    a disadvantage for the CHP and an advantage for the ruling Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party). The developments, it seems, may be
    influential on the nearing municipal elections; however, only the CHP
    has the power to create pressure to influence the investigation. The AK
    Party lacks the means to be influential on the judiciary. In Turkey,
    the judiciary is independent. It is independent to the degree of very
    advanced standards.

    The pro-Ergenekon types are conducting a very comprehensive defense
    against the investigation. There are several lines of defense set
    up to this effect. In the farthest line of defense, there are the
    proponents of Ergenekon who have dug "republican positions." This
    is where Baykal stands. This is their main argument: "Deepening
    the Ergenekon investigation means waging war against the republic
    and secularism." This is an old tactic commonly used to corner
    conservative politicians by creating a regime issue out of simple
    political debates. Those who talk about the possible dangers that
    the elimination of a counter-guerrilla organization may pose to the
    regime do not have a firm standing. This is because they have no
    response to the question "Why?"

    Waging a political confrontation and a regime debate over the
    Ergenekon investigation is not persuasive. Everyone has the following
    question in mind: "Should the republic be defended by committing
    murders?" Moreover, the suggestion that the political government
    is "taking revenge" through the Ergenekon investigation is sheer
    demagogy. What legal tools does the government possess? Isn't the
    judiciary independent? Would the government be capable of preventing
    the investigation even if it had a desire to do so?

    Everyone needs law

    "Everyone needs law" is a sentence uttered to a person who wrongs
    someone else. It is a sort of warning, reminding the oppressor of
    the possibility that s/he might face the same oppression in the
    future. The Ergenekon investigation proceeds accompanied by media
    wars. Complaints are being voiced that personal rights are being
    violated. The former honorary president of the Supreme Court of
    Appeals is a legal expert with authority who cautions people about
    these violations of personal rights.

    Yes, there are violations, but it is also the case that facilities and
    possibilities afforded by law are being used to defend the Ergenekon
    terrorist organization. Thus, the front lines of the defense are
    populated by those who strive to produce legal ammunition. Until
    now, there has not been a single legal bullet these people could
    produce. None of the Ergenekon lawyers have managed to find an answer
    to the question "How is this investigation deficient from a legal
    standpoint?" A police officer lowering the head of former Higher
    Education Board (YÃ~C-K) President Kemal Guruz can be explained as the
    police officer's effort to keep his head from bumping into the car. In
    the face of complaints about the cold and a broken heating system,
    police officers who work under those conditions may raise the same
    complaints, saying: "We, too, are cold. Please find a solution to this
    problem." Rather, the police officers are aware of the tension and are
    extraordinarily careful. They conduct house searches like gentlemen.

    The groups who claim that the trial will be fruitless had been making
    much noise until the defendants began to be cross-examined in the
    trial going on in Silivri. Today, we no longer need to give responses
    to those who are shocked by the arsenal of Ã~D°brahim Ã...Â~^ahin or
    to those who make their best efforts to distinguish Ergenekon from
    Susurluk. Doesn't the fact that Baykal has sounded a "red alert"
    show that these defensive lines are useless?

    Why then this absurd resistance? Why do people who appear to be
    respectable blindly attempt to defend Ergenekon? What are they
    hiding? What is it that they protect or fear?

    Ergenekon was the unethical ingredient of power equations in Turkey. It
    seems that this immorality has stained many people. Some are worried
    about being accomplices and some about losing an effective tool of
    power. Declaring the suspects innocent is as unlawful as declaring
    them guilty without knowing anything about the investigation. Those
    who announce that the detained people are innocent imply in advance
    that they, too, are innocent, don't they?

    Those who accuse the prosecutors and issue preconceived judgments
    about Ergenekon must provide us with information in order to
    be convincing. Susurluk is only one leg of the octopus called
    Ergenekon. And do not forget that this is a terrorist organization.

    Where is the investigation headed?

    It is said that the tension created by the investigation is very
    high. This is not correct, as this tension has nothing to do with the
    legal course of the investigation. It is impossible to destroy the
    tools of crime and the evidence discovered and to act as if nothing
    had happened. The nation is watching the developments with increased
    interest and concern.

    The high volume of noise that results may be attributed to futile
    attempts by pro-Ergenekon types. There is no tension; there is only
    desperate resistance by Ergenekon. In short, Turkey is purging its
    counter-guerrilla. This organization has been revealed, and it is
    impossible for it to hide itself underground once again.

    In other words, everything is being normalized.

    --Boundary_(ID_S86XM+gSSJOrUxqvtUcdBg )--
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