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ANKARA: There Are 25 Different Ergenekons In Turkey

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  • ANKARA: There Are 25 Different Ergenekons In Turkey

    'THERE ARE 25 DIFFERENT ERGENEKONS IN TURKEY'

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 26 2009
    Turkey

    The Ergenekon investigation presents clues pointing to the perpetrators
    of unsolved murders in Turkey and the figures who orchestrated social
    upheaval.

    Documents seized in the houses of suspected Ergenekon members provide
    answers to the sensational murders and show the motives behind such
    incidents. One document found in retired Brig. Gen. Veli Kucuk's house
    provides a great deal of evidence on the assassinations of Ugur Mumcu,
    Ozdemir Sabancı and Uzeyir Garih, as well as a helicopter accident
    in which former Gendarmerie Commander Gen. EÅ~_ref Bitlis died.

    The document indicates that Mumcu was assassinated because he possessed
    sensitive documentation on 100,000 weapons allegedly sent from Turkey
    to Jalal Talabani in January 1991.

    The same document stresses that Bitlis was killed 25 days later
    because he also had information on the weapons.

    Council of State attack

    The Ergenekon investigation further sheds lights on the Council of
    State attack perpetrated by Alparslan Arslan on May 17, 2006. Council
    member Mustafa Yucel Ozbilgin died in the attack and three other
    members were injured. It was argued that the attack was staged
    because of the Council of State's recent decision on the headscarf
    issue. The funeral held for Ozbilgin was turned into a demonstration
    against the government. The military appeared at the funeral with a
    large delegation. Even former Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit attended
    despite health problems. Shortly after the funeral, Ecevit had a
    brain hemorrhage and died while in a coma without actually knowing
    the real motive behind the attack.

    The Ergenekon investigation further sheds lights on the Council of
    State attack perpetrated by Alparslan Arslan on May 17, 2006.

    The case was subsequently resolved because the executioner was
    apprehended at the scene of the crime. It has become evident that
    the hand grenades Arslan had previously used in an attack against the
    Cumhuriyet daily were from the same series seized in a shanty house in
    Umraniye. Osman Yıldırım, arrested in connection with the Council
    of State attack, told Ergenekon prosecutor Zekeriya Oz that Kucuk
    gave him the grenades at a meeting in AtaÅ~_ehir on April 27, 2006.

    It also became clear that Arslan was serving as the legal counsel
    of DoguÅ~_ Factoring, owned by retired Captain Muzaffer Tekin,
    who is currently under arrest in connection with the Ergenekon
    investigation, and that he had a badge from Ulusal TV, run by Dogu
    Perincek, another suspect currently in custody. The Supreme Court
    of Appeals, considering these developments, has decided to merge the
    Ergenekon and the Council of State cases.

    Uzeyir Garih murder resolved

    The murder of Garih, a Jewish-Turkish businessman, has also been
    illuminated by the Ergenekon investigation. The perpetrator of the
    murder, Yener Yermez, was caught and told the police that he murdered
    Garih for money. However, this raised suspicions because the murderer
    did not steal Garih's Rolex watch. Yermez had also been serving in
    the military as an enlisted private.

    In a letter he sent from prison to Fehmi Koru, a columnist for the
    YeniÅ~_afak daily, Yermez claimed that he had taken responsibility
    for the murder in return for a payment in the amount of $1.5
    million. However, this allegation was not considered at that time. The
    Ergenekon investigation revealed that retired Col. Fikri Karadag,
    also under arrest in connection with the Ergenekon case, was the
    commander of the military unit where Yermez was serving as a private.

    This military quarter also rose to prominence in the past when it
    became evident that retired Gen. Habil Kucuk had contact with Osman
    Gurbuz, also known as YeÅ~_il, the notorious executioner of the deep
    state. Kucuk served when the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) attempted
    to assassinate Chief of General Staff Gen. Dogan GureÅ~_. At the time
    of Garih's murder, Oktay Yıldırım was a noncommissioned officer
    in the Hasdal military unit. In consideration of these findings,
    the Ergenekon prosecutors decided to interrogate Yermez. According
    to the allegations, Kucuk ordered the execution of Garih because
    he refused to provide financial support for a coup attempt led by
    Ergenekon in Azerbaijan.

    Gazi incidents

    Ersönmez Yarbay(L.) The statement by an anonymous witness testifying
    in the Ergenekon investigation gives detailed information on
    a coffeehouse raid in the Gazi neighborhood, where 17 people were
    killed in 1995.

    The statement by an anonymous witness testifying in the Ergenekon
    investigation gives detailed information on a coffeehouse raid in the
    Gazi neighborhood, where 17 people were killed in 1995. The witness
    argues that Kucuk and Osman Gurbuz sponsored the whole event and
    that mob leader Sedat Peker and his men carried out the attacks in
    an attempt to escalate tension between Alevis and Sunnis. It was also
    noticed that Kucuk played role in making sure that Peker was exempted
    from military service with a fake health report.

    Tuncay Guney's confessions

    In 2001 a great deal of information was obtained about the Ergenekon
    organization. A former journalist, Tuncay Guney, provided extensive
    information in his statement to a former head of the intelligence
    unit at the Ä°stanbul Police Department, Adil Serdar Sacan, about
    Ergenekon. Interestingly, Sacan was also arrested in connection with
    the Ergenekon case. It turns out he hid the information provided
    by Guney. The relevant question here is why effective action was
    not taken against this organization despite the massive amount of
    information obtained in 2001.

    Guney, who has since converted to Judaism and currently lives in
    Canada, argued that Turkey sent 24,000 weapons to Talabani for use
    against the PKK, whereas 6,000 of these 24,000 were delivered to
    Cemil Bayık, one of the top leaders of the PKK.

    Guney further argued that Bitlis was murdered because he was aware
    of the delivery to Bayık. Guney was a prolific source for the
    Ergenekon investigation; however, there were concerns and doubts
    about his reliability.

    Yarbay: There are more Ergenekon-like organizations

    Former Ankara deputy Ersönmez Yarbay, the chairman of the
    parliamentary commission set up to investigate the murder of Ugur
    Mumcu, says there are 25 Ergenekon-like organizations in Turkey. Yarbay
    further states that Ergenekon was eliminated because it pushed the
    boundaries of the current system and that Mumcu was murdered to
    escalate tension among secular circles.

    Noting that the visible increase in the number of unresolved murders
    during the period between 1991 and 1995 shows a change in the strategy
    for combating terrorism, Yarbay argues that this change was the
    introduction of terror strategies to deal with terror.

    "Because of this policy change, thousands of unresolved murders
    have been committed. The number of criminals within the state also
    increased. As a result of this, those who were forced to commit crimes
    back then have continued to do so until now."

    Recalling that one of the 20 possible scenarios regarding the Mumcu
    murder fits well with the arguments of Tuncay Guney, Yarbay also
    says they have found no evidence showing that Mumcu was murdered by
    Israeli secret service agents.

    "Secular circles were provoked by secular institutions back then
    in Turkey in an attempt to exploit their sensitivity and to make
    sure that they would become harsher in their stance. People like
    Mumcu were actually killed by people with similar worldviews. He was
    murdered to stir up secular sentiments. The murder of Ugur Mumcu,
    Bahriye Ucok and Muammer Aksoy and the Madımak fire in Sivas are all
    linked. These murders and events were organized to draw attention to
    a danger of Islamism," states Yarbay.

    Project staged to cause secularists to take to the streets

    Noting that a project was staged in the aftermath of the Feb. 28, 1997
    process to provoke secular circles, Yarbay argues that the murder
    of Professor Ahmet Taner KıÅ~_lalı was the final step of this
    project. Yarbay's explanation also sheds light on anti-government
    rallies held before and after the presidential elections in 2007. A
    substantial number of the rallies' organizers are currently in
    custody in connection with the Ergenekon case. Yarbay stresses that
    the visible increase in the number of unresolved murders during the
    eras when leftist parties were in office is not a coincidence.

    "There are at least 25 other organizations even bigger than
    Ergenekon. Ergenekon conducted activities that the current system
    cannot handle. It pushed the limits of the existing system. Were it
    to remain within the limits of the system, there would not be any
    problem at all. For this reason, it is being eliminated."

    Noting that secret organizations should be eliminated for a more
    democratic and stable regime and that further measures should
    be taken to make sure that similar organizations do not emerge
    again, Yarbay says: "The Ergenekon investigation is a his toric
    opportunity. Preparation of the Ergenekon indictment and the
    prosecution of its members is a great opportunity for Turkey's future."

    What would have happened if Ergenekon were not identified and
    prosecuted? The documents and information seized in previously
    identified locations and statements by Ergenekon members show that the
    organization was ready to carry out a number of sensational actions
    if the investigation had not been initiated. It is interesting to
    note that the planned actions were similar to those committed in the
    past. For instance, Ergenekon considered murdering Alevi leader Kazım
    Genc with a package bomb. This method was employed in the murders of
    Bahriye Ucok and Hamid Fendoglu. Tension was to be escalated between
    Alevis and Sunnis by killing Alevi leader Ali Balkız with a car
    bomb. This method was also employed in the assassinations of Mumcu
    and KıÅ~_lalı.

    Ergenekon also planned to kill Armenian community leader Minas Durmaz
    Guler in front of his home. Muammer Aksoy, Hrant Dink, Turan Durdun
    and Necip Hablemitoglu were all killed by the same method. The
    investigation also revealed that Ergenekon considered killing the
    Armenian patriarch using a shoulder-fired missile. The same type of
    weapon was used in the assassination attempt against businessman Jak
    Kamhi in 1993.

    --Boundary_(ID_SyPihzQ9/TutVickJlv4CA)--
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