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  • ANKARA: New Ergenekon indictment in offing

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 24 2009


    New Ergenekon indictment in offing


    An indictment charging 26 individuals, most of whom served as police
    and military officers and were detained on Thursday on charges of
    being members of Ergenekon, a clandestine terrorist organization
    nested within state organs and charged with plotting to overthrow the
    government, is on the way, prosecutors said on Friday.

    Ä°stanbul's Deputy Chief Prosecutor Turan
    �olakkadı said yesterday that a comprehensive report
    about the group's ammunition and weapons caches found earlier will
    soon be released. He gave a summary of Thursday's raids, detentions
    and searches, adding that new detentions might be around the corner
    based on new evidence found.

    Two Ergenekon assassination teams were captured in Thursday's police
    operations, conducted in 14 provinces throughout the country in raids
    organized as part of an investigation into the group. Most of those
    taken into custody were detained 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 dozens taken into custody on Jan. 7 included
    some of the hawkish generals behind the Feb. 28, 1997 unarmed military
    coup that overthrew a democratically elected coalition government. One
    such detainee is retired Gen. Erdal Å?enel, a former legal
    undersecretary at the General Staff.

    A second indictment is yet to be released and will include close to 20
    people, including two former army commanders, a journalist and the
    leader of a professional chamber -- all detained on June 1 of last
    year.

    Ã-zbek in spotlight again for extreme wealth

    Mustafa Ã-zbek, who has been heading the Türk Metal workers'
    union for 33 years, has come into the spotlight with his wealth on
    various occasions. Known for his anti-imperialist stance and political
    engagements, Ã-zbek has a hard-to-believe amount of money and a
    number of immovable properties. Coming from a poor family, Ã-zbek
    carved out a fortune soon after he became the head of the metals
    sector workers' union, Türk Metal. He currently holds a 40
    percent share of the Cumhuriyet daily, several five-star hotels in
    Ankara, Didim and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (KKTC), the
    ART TV network and the Baha news agency. Türk Metal is an
    extension of the Milli Ä°Å? Workers' Union (MÄ°SK),
    famous for its stance against leftist and revolutionary workers'
    unions. Ã-zbek, who started his career at the Turkish Mechanical
    and Chemical Industry Corporation (MKE), worked as a laborer until
    1971. He later engaged in unionism and became the head of Türk
    Metal in four years. Ã-zbek's assets are predicted to exceed TL 10
    million.


    Retired Gen. Å?ener Eruygur, retired Gen. HurÅ?it Tolon,
    retired Gen. İlker Güven and former Gendarmerie General
    Command Intelligence Department head Levent Ersöz as well as
    Ankara Chamber of Commerce (ATO) Chairman Sinan Aygün and the
    Ankara bureau chief of the radically secularist Cumhuriyet daily,
    Mustafa Balbay, were among those taken into police custody in that
    raids.

    More than 100 have been detained since the beginning of the
    investigation in July 2007, when an arms cache was discovered inside a
    shanty house in Ä°stanbul. Some of those were arrested, some
    were released pending trial. As the investigation expanded from the
    July 2007 discovery, a structure suspected of being responsible for a
    number of politically motivated murders, including that of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in January 2007 and attacks on
    newspapers and judicial entities to foment chaos and engineer a
    military takeover, became more and more visible. Every new wave of
    raids has produced more documents, evidence, findings and testimonies
    leading to more detentions.

    Arms caches

    Early in January, the police discovered a weapons cache buried in a
    forest in Ankara's GölbaÅ?ı region through a map
    found in suspect Å?ahin's home. Officers discovered 30 hand
    grenades, three light anti-tank weapons (LAW), many plastic
    explosives, ammunition for Uzi machine guns and other ammunition
    buried close to a road near the capital. Other weapons storage sites
    as well as munitions were found in some of the suspect's homes. Police
    seized a large number of bombs and ammunition during searches made in
    the house of Lit. Col. Mustafa Dönmez, in the Sapanca district
    of Balıkesir. A sketch found in his house also helped police to
    unearth explosives and ammunition on Jan. 12 at a historic site in the
    Sincan suburb of Ankara.

    Military statement on recent detentions

    In a press briefing it held yesterday General Staff Communications'
    Unit President Gen. Metin Gürak responded to a question on the
    munitions found in Lt. Col. Dönmez's house, saying, "We, more
    than everyone else, want this matter to be clarified."

    He also said the General Staff had appealed to the Press Council and
    Journalists' Union to impose sanctions on certain newspapers that
    published news stories about Col. Abdülkerim
    Kırca. Kırca was an alleged leader of JİTEM, a
    clandestine and illegal gendarmerie intelligence unit whose existence
    has thus far been officially denied, who was, allegedly, responsible
    for hundreds of unsolved murders, kidnappings and killings of mostly
    Kurdish individuals in the Southeast. Kırca was found dead last
    Monday afternoon in his Ankara home.

    Criticism from opposition

    Ergenekon has also been a source of political tension since the
    investigation's start. Republican People's Party (CHP) leader Deniz
    Baykal, who spoke at a party convention yesterday, accused the Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party) of being behind the operation. "They
    have undermined secularism and the social state. Now they are trying
    to destroy the rule of law and democracy," he said, referring to the
    four pillars of the Turkish Republic.

    He referred to the Ergenekon investigation as a "social trauma" and
    accused the government of trying to crush opposition voices.

    Another criticism came from Haydar Ã-zbek, the son of Mustafa
    Ã-zbek, chairman of the Türk Metal Ä°Å? workers'
    union, also detained in Thursday's operations. Mustafa Ã-zbek is
    being charged with financing the Ergenekon terrorist organization
    using the union's money. Haydar Ã-zbek yesterday said the latest
    wave of operations would be the wave "that will capsize this ship." He
    said: "That wave will drown those who made it. They are trying to
    silence the people. The day will come when they will be silenced. They
    will not be allowed to talk."

    A number of Türk Metal Ä°Å? officials were detained
    on Thursday in addition to Mustafa Ã-zbek. Deputy Chairman Mecit
    Hızır, Secretary-General Muharrem Aslıyüce
    and former Secretary-General Süleyman Erdinç were also
    detained. Prosecutors have long suspected that Mustafa Ã-zbek was
    one of Ergenekon's major backers. The Ankara Chief Prosecutor's Office
    had previously seized the past five years of the union's financial
    records and requested its financial statements and other bookkeeping
    records from the Labor Ministry. The prosecutors reportedly found
    important clues about the link between Ergenekon and Türk Metal
    Ä°Å? in these files.

    Mustafa Ã-zbek was a member of the movement Türkiyem (My
    Turkey), founded by a number of people who are currently in jail as
    Ergenekon suspects. The movement, which was being financed by the
    union, was attempting to become a political party. Kemal
    Kerinçsiz, an ultranationalist lawyer known for filing lawsuits
    against intellectuals and writers whose opinions do not match the
    official state line on various issues, was the president of the
    İstanbul branch of Türkiyem. Retired Gen. Tolon was on
    the movement's consultative board. Tolon was also arrested in the
    Ergenekon investigation.



    24 January 2009, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN Ä°STANBUL
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