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ANKARA: Ergenekon: An Urban Legend?

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  • ANKARA: Ergenekon: An Urban Legend?

    ERGENEKON: AN URBAN LEGEND?
    By Orhan Kemal Cenga°Z

    Today's Zaman
    June 26 2009
    Turkey

    According to some, the ruling party is now taking revenge for the
    closure case against it. For some Westerners, the Ergenekon case is
    just a part of the dirty war between the Justice and Development Party
    (AK Party) and those looking to maintain the status quo in Turkey. I
    am trying to put myself in the shoes of the man on the street in
    Turkey. If I were them, I would probably reach the same conclusion and
    believe that Ergenekon is just a fabricated story by some circles in
    Turkey. It is quite easy to reach this kind of conclusion if you read
    some "mainstream" media outlets. Certain media groups have actively
    been spreading this propaganda, and they are doing it using quite
    sophisticated methods.

    My perspective though, is completely different from what these media
    groups have been trying to convince us of. I am a human rights lawyer,
    and I have known "deep state gangs" for such a long time. In 1997 and
    1998, I was working on cases of village destruction and extrajudicial
    killings in southeastern Turkey. I was representing Kurdish villagers
    before the European Court of Human Rights. Since then, I have known
    about JÄ°TEM -- an infamous illegal apparatus of the gendarmerie,
    the very existence of which have always been denied. JÄ°TEM kidnapped
    and killed thousands of Kurds who were believed to be members or
    supporters of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). Today,
    founders of this illegal organization are in prison in connection
    with the Ergenekon case. Even children in the Kurdish regions of
    Turkey knew the names of these JÄ°TEM commanders. These people were
    never held accountable for the crimes they committed before. These
    JÄ°TEM people were very active in the operational part of Ergenekon.

    I also have some other reasons to believe that Ergenekon is much
    bigger and much more complex than most people think. These reasons,
    once again, spring from my personal experience.

    Malatya massacre

    In April 2007, three missionaries were killed in quite a barbaric way
    in Malatya. Their throats were slit after long being tortured by their
    murderers, five ultranationalist youngsters. The protestant community
    in Turkey asked me to follow the case and to represent the families
    of the victims before the criminal court where the accused would be
    tried. After briefly reviewing the file, I came to the conclusion
    that the case was much more complex than it first appeared. I also got
    the impression that some "deep state elements" may have had a hand in
    the case. Therefore, I decided to invite lawyers from different cases
    in which the deep state had been implicated to take part in Malatya
    case. More than 20 lawyers kindly agreed to join the legal team in
    this case. However, this move apparently made the real perpetrators
    behind this case very angry. When we went to Malatya, the news in the
    local media was shocking. My picture and an agitating story appeared
    in the local newspapers. They were portraying me and my colleagues
    as provocateurs whose only purpose was to harm the reputation of
    Malatya. After a while, I started to receive highly sophisticated
    and serious threats. However, the most shocking and disturbing thing
    happened later on. After gaining a deeper understanding of the case
    file, I came to conclusion that this case and some other murders were
    somehow linked to each other. Detecting many similarities in the
    murder of Father Andrea Santoro in Trabzon in 2006, the killing of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in January 2007 and the Malatya
    massacre case, I thought all these murders were carried out by the
    Turkish Gladio (the name given to secret armies established in NATO
    countries; Turkey is the only country that has never dissolved this
    structure in the state). I started to tell my theory to my colleagues
    over the phone: "Hey, I think these cases are linked to each other and
    these murders were carried out by the Turkish Gladio. I came to this
    conclusion after considering these factors..." After I told this theory
    of mine to a couple of colleagues an extremely strange thing happened.

    The Turkish Gladio

    A week later I got a call from a journalist in Ä°stanbul. He said
    a strange guy visited their newspaper and told them, "Santoro, Dink
    and the Malatya murders were linked to each other, and they all were
    carried out by the Turkish Gladio." He also "explained" the structure
    of the Turkish Gladio for them. He was carrying a sketch showing the
    organizational structure of Gladio. He said, showing the top of the
    "organizational structure," the leader of the Turkish Gladio is Orhan
    Kemal Cengiz.

    I then understood that my analysis was true. The organization of
    course was wiretapping my telephone and apparently they did not like
    the idea that the lawyer in the massacre case would make a lot of
    noise by alleging that the Malatya massacre was actually of the work
    of the deep state. So they decided to make the first hit.

    Bulent Varol Aral, the man who visited newspapers and tried to
    convince journalists that I was the chief of Gladio, was arrested in
    the Malatya massacre case later by the court on suspicion of conspiring
    with the murderers.

    When I developed this theory, I did not know the name of
    Ergenekon. Today, however, I know very well that Ergenekon is the name
    of the Turkish Gladio. I also know that the Turkish Gladio is much
    bigger and more complex than has been discovered in the Ergenekon case.

    However, some want us to believe that there is not such an
    organization, that Ergenekon is just an urban legend. I wish they were
    right. But I know very well that we just have touched the tentacles
    of the octopus with this Ergenekon case, and if we cannot capture
    the body of the octopus, democracy in this country will be an urban
    legend in the future!
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