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Court Seeks Help To Link Murders In Turkey To 'Deep State'

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  • Court Seeks Help To Link Murders In Turkey To 'Deep State'

    COURT SEEKS HELP TO LINK MURDERS IN TURKEY TO 'DEEP STATE'

    EuropeNews
    Nov 19 2009
    Denmark

    MALATYA -- Judges and prosecutors in the trial regarding the murder of
    three Christians in this southeastern city in Turkey on Friday (Nov.
    13) renewed their request for help from the Istanbul High Criminal
    Court as reports mounted linking the slayings to top gendarmerie
    officials.

    The Malatya court judges overseeing hearings on the murders of Turkish
    Christians Necati Aydin and Ugur Yuksel and German Christian Tilmann
    Geske requested that the Istanbul criminal court establish whether
    the case was linked to the controversial cabal of military, political
    and other influential figures, Ergenekon, which has allegedly been
    trying to overthrow the government by upsetting Turkey's peace.

    For the last two and a half years prosecuting lawyers have established
    the case that Emre Gunaydin, Salih Gurler, Cuma Ozdemir, Hamit Ceker
    and Abuzer Yildirim, who were caught at the murder scene on April
    18, 2007, were not acting independently but were incited by Turkey's
    "deep state," an expression of which is Ergenekon. Seven months ago the
    Malatya court requested from prosecutors on the Ergenekon case at the
    Istanbul high court to examine whether the two cases were connected.

    They have not received a reply yet.

    The court and various mainstream media have received informant letters
    with specific names linking the murders to top gendarmerie officials.

    Last month a Turkish newspaper received a list of payments the
    gendarmerie made to informants to physically follow and collect
    information on Christians in Malatya. Phone trees also show calls
    made from the murderers to two alleged "middle-men," Huseyin Yelki
    and Bulent Varol Aral, gendarmerie officials and other nationalist
    figures in Malatya.

    "We are expecting the Istanbul prosecutor to make a careful
    investigation and give us a response and attest to the connections
    the court has found," said prosecuting attorney Erdal Dogan on Friday
    during a press briefing. "The actions of these men who are on trial
    were not independent, and from the beginning we believed they were
    organized by Ergenekon. Our theories have become more concrete, and
    we are expecting the Istanbul prosecutor to investigate these closely,
    establish the connections and give us a response."

    Lawyers said that informant letters, testimonies and other evidence
    have only confirmed their original suspicions. The most striking of
    these is that the local gendarmerie forces were following activities
    of Christians in Malatya in the months leading up to the murders and
    afterwards yet did not stop the young men from stabbing and slashing
    the three Christians to death.

    "If you have been watching a small, tiny group so closely," said lawyer
    Orhan Kemal Cengiz, "how could it be possible that you disregard
    this murder? This is a legitimate question which requires ordinary
    intelligence."

    Last month the head of Istanbul police intelligence, Ramazan Akyurek,
    was demoted amid allegations that he had neglected to investigate
    three Christian murder cases between 2006 and 2007. When Turkish
    news reporters asked Dogan whether prosecutors would make a request
    to investigate whether Akyurek played a greater part in the murders,
    he said that it was not out of the question.

    The five young suspects were apprehended after Zirve Publishing Co.

    workers went to the publishing house to find out why the three
    Christian men were not answering their phones. Finding the door of
    the office locked and getting no answer, they called police. In a
    report prepared by Akyurek's department, his staff claimed that the
    murderers were apprehended thanks to phone tapping - which attorney
    Dogan said is a lie.

    "According to a report, they said that they had been listening to the
    murderers' phones and following them, and that that's how they found
    and arrested them," said Dogan. "You know this is a lie. The five
    men were arrested haphazardly. We know that. We also know that the
    gendarmerie was in fact listening to their conversations, but there's
    something interesting here: On the one hand they are listening to the
    criminals' phones, but on the other they couldn't thwart the crime."

    Prosecuting lawyers said that this makes both Akyurek's department
    and the gendarmerie guilty of being accomplices to the crime, and
    that they should be tried along with the five young men.

    "They should stand trial for not thwarting a crime and failing to
    perform their duties," said Dogan. "They [gendarmerie and the police
    intelligence security] should be tried under Article 8 of the penal
    code as accomplices because they are connected. This is not a question
    of removing someone from his position. They should stand trial with
    the men who are now on trial."

    Frustration The lawyers expressed frustration at being able to see
    the bigger picture yet not having enough evidence to proceed, as well
    as with having to wait on the Istanbul prosecutor for more evidence.

    "It is crystal clear," said attorney Cengiz. "There is a much bigger
    agenda and much more complex connections. We convinced everyone,
    but we cannot do this beyond reasonable doubt; we can't prove it. We
    are blocked, actually."

    Cengiz explained that as lawyers for the victims' families, they are
    not in a position to collect evidence.

    "We are heavily dependent on what the prosecutor is doing, and
    unfortunately they are not able to do much," he said.

    Cengiz said that although the case was complicated and the Malatya
    judges resisted their arguments at the outset of the hearings,
    now they agree with the prosecuting lawyers that there is a broader
    network behind the murders.

    "Now they are very clear - they know what happened and what kind
    of connections there are, etcetera, but they are fighting against
    a dragon," said Cengiz. "So they desperately sent this request to
    the prosecutor in Istanbul, hoping that it will be the Istanbul
    prosecutor who will create these links rather than them. It should
    be vice versa because they have all these details, but they are not
    ready for this confrontation."

    Cengiz explained that while the Malatya court has a better
    understanding of the case than the Istanbul prosecutors, the advantage
    of the Istanbul High Criminal Court is that it has the backing of the
    Justice Ministry and is better positioned to take on the powers that
    may be behind this and other murders.

    "They can't take the responsibility because this is just a tiny court
    in the remote part of Turkey, so how can they confront the reality?"

    he said.

    The next hearing is set for Dec. 25, and prosecutors expect that by
    then the 13th Istanbul High Criminal Court will have sent an answer
    about connections of the murders to Ergenekon. They are also expecting
    the prosecuting judge to demand all five of the young men be charged
    with "three times life imprisonment," plus additional years for
    organizing the crime.

    "In our estimation, until now in a bizarre way the accused are acting
    like they have been given assurances that they will be forgiven and
    will get off the hook," Dogan commented on the comfortable demeanor
    of the five men in court and their denial that others were behind the
    murders. "In the last months we see a continuation of the attempts
    to wreak havoc and chaos and overthrow the government. So we think
    whoever is giving confidence to these guys is affecting them. It is
    obvious to us that there is a group actively doing this. That means
    they are still trying to create chaos."

    Last week Ergenekon prosecutors found a hit-list consisting of 10
    prominent representatives of minority groups as well as subscribers
    to Armenian weekly newspaper Agos, whose editor-in-chief was murdered
    three months before the Christians in Malatya. Cengiz explained that
    Ergenekon members are obsessed with purging Turkey of non-Muslim
    elements and non-Turkish minorities, which they see as a threat to
    the state.

    "They were trying to create chaos in Turkey, and of course they were
    trying to send a clear message to members of non-Muslim groups that
    they are not wanted in Turkey," said Cengiz of the way the three
    Christians in Malatya were murdered. "They did it in a horrendous,
    barbaric way. This was also part of the message. Everything was
    planned but not by them, by other people. They are just puppets."

    Further Evidence of Cabal This week Turkish news magazine Yeni
    Aktuel published a five-page article with pictures chronicling
    the "anti-terrorist" activities of a counter-guerilla team leader
    identified only by his initials, K.T.

    In the article, K.T. described how for years he and his team pursued
    and killed members of the outlawed Kurdish Worker's Party (PKK).

    Anti-guerilla activities in Turkey are paramilitary efforts managed
    by the "deep state."

    In K.T.'s account, he claimed that during his time in Malatya he met
    with members of an ultra-nationalist group who talked about murdering
    Hrant Dink, editor of Agos. Also during that time, members of the
    group spoke about how those who distributed Bibles in Malatya had to be
    "punished."

    One of the members of this group was a high school teacher called "O."

    The teacher said that he arranged to be out of town before the Malatya
    murders, because police were following him and he wanted to make sure
    that they could not connect him to the Malatya murders.
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