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ANKARA: Police Capture Two Ergenekon Death Squads

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  • ANKARA: Police Capture Two Ergenekon Death Squads

    POLICE CAPTURE TWO ERGENEKON DEATH SQUADS

    Today's Zaman
    http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.d o?load=detay&link=164816&bolum=100
    Jan 22 2009
    Turkey

    Two assassination teams of Ergenekon, a clandestine terrorist
    organization nested within state organs and charged with plotting to
    overthrow the government, were captured yesterday by the police in
    14 provinces throughout the country in raids organized as part of an
    investigation into the group.

    Twenty police officers and military officers were detained in
    yesterday's operations on charges of being members of two assassination
    teams led by Ä°brahim Å~^ahin, a former senior police official who was
    the deputy head of the National Police Department's Special Operations
    Unit. Å~^ahin was arrested on Jan. 7.

    A wave of detentions on Jan. 7 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
    had they been carried out.

    The many detentions of special operations officers were tied to
    statements from Å~^ahin, reportedly made during his police testimony
    following his detention. In his initial testimony, Å~^ahin said
    7th Army Commander Gen. Bekir Kalyoncu, currently on active duty,
    had assigned him to set up a team of 300 officers to be employed in
    a new anti-terrorism department. Kalyoncu also promised that Å~^ahin
    would be the undersecretary of the new unit. Å~^ahin claimed he was
    working to set up this new structure. He said a document found in his
    home during the police search was a list of officers to be chosen for
    the special force. The document was titled "S-1" and listed military
    officers and police Special Operations Unit members under the age of
    30. Analysts believe most of those detained yesterday were individuals
    from the list.

    Members of the Foundation for Social Rights and Values asked Ergenekon
    prosecutors to open some wells in the Southeast alleged to contain
    the acid-doused bodies of missing people.

    Yesterday's raids were launched on a warrant issued by Ergenekon
    prosecutor Zekeriya Oz on property of individuals affiliated with
    a workers' union and the ART TV network. Authorities began their
    search of a house in Ankara's Beysukent district belonging to Mustafa
    Ozbek, the head of metals sector workers' union Turk Metal, at 7:30
    a.m. Ozbek, Turk Metal Deputy Chairman Ferruh Kavlak and Turk Metal
    Secretary-General Muharrem Aslıyuce. Union officials Suleyman Erdinc
    and Pevrul Kavrat were also detained.

    A group of Turk Metal Union members protested the detention of Ozbek
    in front of the Ankara Police Department yesterday. Union members,
    holding signs, chanted: "We are wherever Ozbek is. Don't be silent,
    you will be next. We are Turkish, we are strong, we are Ataturkists."

    Journalist Unal Ä°nanc and Turkmeneli Association President SavaÅ~_
    Avcı were detained in İstanbul. Researcher Erhan Göksel, owner of
    the Verso Research Company, was also detained yesterday.

    Answering reporters' questions while being taken away by the police for
    a health check-up, Göksel said he was not a member of Ergenekon. Ozbek
    also made a brief statement in front of the Ankara Police Department,
    claiming that the detentions and raids were "unlawful."

    A police chief and a police officer were detained in Antalya and
    sent to Ä°stanbul to testify as part of the investigation, sources
    said. One other person was detained in Bursa.

    Other detentions took place in operations in Antalya, Elazıg,
    Hakkari, Hatay, Ä°stanbul, Igdır, Isparta, KahramanmaraÅ~_, Siirt,
    Å~^ırnak and Tokat. The police also searched the Å~^irinoglu Social
    and Strategic Research Center in Ankara

    Commenting on his father's arrest, Ozbek's son Haydar Ozbek said:
    "We are living in a period when being a Turk in Turkey is a crime. I
    wouldn't be surprised if they arrest Nejat Uygur soon," he said,
    in an ambiguous comment about a veteran thespian.

    Other searches and detentions

    Murat Cavdar, a police officer from the Special Operations Unit,
    was detained in Tokat. In Isparta, a high-ranking military officer
    was detained. Three special operations officers were detained in
    KahramanmaraÅ~_. In Bursa, a military officer was detained.

    At least 10 people were detained in Ä°stanbul, although the police
    did not announce an exact figure.

    A gardener who worked for Lt. Col. Mustafa Dönmez, detained in the
    Jan. 7 raids, was taken to the Ä°stanbul Police Department yesterday
    to testify. Twelve rifle grenades and 12 booby traps were found.

    Meanwhile, President Abdullah Gul yesterday reacted to news stories
    about a luncheon he gave for military and government representatives
    earlier this week. Some newspapers had claimed that the president,
    presidents of high courts and the prime minister had spoken about
    the Ergenekon investigation during the luncheon. "Would the judges,
    the president and the prime minister violate the law? Would they speak
    about an ongoing case?" he asked, speaking to journalists yesterday
    during a brief press conference at the Cankaya presidential palace.

    --Boundary_(ID_+X+DmaH+g3490G2y0OmeFg)--
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