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ANKARA: Cage Indictment Merged With Malatya Missionary Massacre Case

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  • ANKARA: Cage Indictment Merged With Malatya Missionary Massacre Case

    CAGE INDICTMENT MERGED WITH MALATYA MISSIONARY MASSACRE CASE

    Today's Zaman
    April 16 2010
    Turkey

    An indictment regarding the Cage Operation Action Plan, a suspected
    Naval Forces Command plan targeting Turkey's non-Muslim communities,
    has been added to the case file on the 2007 Malatya murders, in which
    three missionaries were brutally killed at a Christian publishing
    house.

    Guray Ertekin, the presiding judge at the Malatya 3rd High Court,
    announced on Thursday that his court had received a copy of the
    Cage indictment and added it to the case file. The decision marks
    an important step in the course of the trial, during which lawyers
    representing the victims' families have continually insisted that
    the murder of the three Christians was not a simple hate crime,
    but something much deeper.

    The Cage plan was retrieved from a CD seized in the office of
    retired Maj. Levent BektaÅ~_, a suspect in the Ergenekon case, in
    April. The CD exposed the group's plans to assassinate prominent
    Turkish non-Muslim figures and place the blame for the killings on
    the Justice and Development Party (AK Party). The desired result was
    an increase in internal and external pressure on the party, leading
    to diminishing public support for the government.

    The plan calls the killings of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink,
    Catholic priest Father Andrea Santoro and three Christians in Malatya
    an "operation." An antidemocratic group within the Naval Forces
    Command aimed at fomenting chaos in society with those killings,
    but complained that the plan failed when large groups protested the
    killings in mass demonstrations.

    "The operations created a large public outcry that non-Muslims
    in the country were the target of reactionary groups. But society
    stood by non-Muslims with a 'We are all Armenians' campaign. Now,
    we will continue the propaganda, showing that the hand behind the
    killings was the AK Party and reactionary organizations," the plan
    reads. Erdal Dogan, one of the co-plaintiffs in the case, called for
    light to be shed on the killings of the three Christians in Malatya.

    In April 2007, Necati Aydın (35), Ugur Yuksel and German national
    Tilman Geske (46) were tied to chairs, tortured and stabbed at the
    Zirve Publishing House in Malatya before their throats were slit. The
    publishing house they worked for printed Bibles and Christian
    literature. Nine men have been charged with the murders, and seven
    of them are in jail. Yesterday's hearing was attended by the victims'
    families, their lawyers and members of domestic and foreign press.

    The first indictment on Ergenekon was also added to the Malatya case
    in 2008. Evidence collected in the Ergenekon investigation suggested
    that the brutal killings might have been organized by Ergenekon,
    which is suspected of a large number of murders and bombings aimed
    at creating chaos in the country to serve the organization's ultimate
    purpose of overthrowing the government.

    The investigation into Ergenekon, a behind-the-scenes network
    attempting to use social and psychological engineering to shape the
    country in accordance with its own ultra-nationalist ideology, began
    in 2007, when a house in Ä°stanbul's Umraniye district that was being
    used as an arms depot was discovered by police.

    Points from additional Cage folders The additional folders of evidence
    related to the Cage indictment were distributed to the suspects'
    lawyers on Wednesday. They link the killings of Dink, Santoro and
    the three Christians in Malatya with the Cage plan. According to the
    evidence in the folders, the murders aimed to trigger the question
    in society of whether non-Muslim residents in Turkey were safe.

    "When the impact of the killings on society is examined, it is seen
    that they were aiming to show that minority groups and non-Muslim
    residents in the country were in danger in Turkey and as if they
    were the target of reactionary groups. The killings also hoped to
    make non-Muslims believe that they could be the target of similar
    attacks at any time," the additional evidence argues.

    It also indicates that the probe into the killing of Dink has not
    gone beyond the capture of the suspected gunman, Ogun Samast.

    Dink was gunned down on Jan. 19, 2007 in broad daylight in front
    of the headquarters of the bilingual Armenian weekly Agos, where he
    was editor-in-chief. Police arrested Samast and an associate, Yasin
    Hayal, a few days later. There are a total of 20 suspects in the case,
    eight of whom are currently under arrest. Following Dink's murder,
    numerous reports suggested that the police had been tipped off about
    the planned assassination more than once before his murder but had
    failed to prevent it.

    "It has been revealed that the suspected murderer of Dink is Ogun
    Samast, who was 17 years old at the time. In line with Samast's
    statements, the instigators and planners of the killing, Yasin Hayal
    and Erhan Tuncel, were also captured. However, the probe has failed
    to go deeper," the evidence notes.

    Explosives placed in submarine The additional folders also include
    evidence related to blocks of TNT and other explosives placed at
    the bottom of a submarine exhibited at the Rahmi M. Koc Museum. The
    explosives were found by police in July based on a plan outlined in
    the Cage plot. They were to be detonated while a group of students
    was visiting the museum.

    According to the folders, the explosives were placed in an apparatus
    that determined the depth of the submarine.

    The insertion of the explosives into the submarine was reportedly
    coordinated by retired Adm. Ahmet Feyyaz Ogutcu, whose name appears in
    Cage plan documents as "the president." He was forced to retire after
    a Supreme Military Council (YAÅ~^) meeting last August, reportedly
    due to his suspected ties with an illegal organization. The Cage plan
    suggests that the explosion should occur on a day when the museum
    was visited by a large group of students. "Materials to be planted at
    the museum have reached operators. We should increase the number of
    visitors to the museum. C.G. will tell us when the visitor intensity
    at the museum is the highest. We should accelerate publicity and
    organization activities [regarding the museum] in schools. Students
    are the most important elements of this project. We should confirm
    the day of the operation," read one of the documents.

    The additional evidence also points to Vice Adm. Kadir Sagdıc and
    Rear Adm. Mehmet Fatih Ä°lgar as the "number two and three men"
    behind the plot. The two were interrogated in February by Ä°zmir
    prosecutors as part of the probe into Ergenekon.

    The Cage indictment calls for jail sentences of up to 15 years for
    Adm. Ogutcu, Vice Adm. Sagdıc and Rear Adm. İlgar on charges of
    membership in a terrorist organization. It also seeks lengthy prison
    sentences for 30 other defendants on similar charges. The suspects
    will stand trial on June 15.

    The folders also include the testimonies of naval officers whose names
    are mentioned in the Cage indictment regarding an interrogation of
    Cage suspects by the Naval Forces Command. According to the folders,
    Emre Tepeli, a noncommissioned officer, told civilian prosecutors
    conducting the Cage probe that they were questioned by two Naval
    Forces Command officers about the suspected plan on Aug. 13, 2009.

    "They asked me to tell all I knew about the Cage plan. I said I knew
    nothing about it. They did not give me any information about the
    plan," Tepeli said. Another noncommissioned officer, Huseyin Erol,
    said he told the naval officers that he had heard about the Cage plan
    when he was invited to the naval base in Gölcuk in August 2009. Col.

    Levent Gulmen also said he was questioned by the Naval Forces Command
    about the plan.
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