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ISTANBUL: Judges in missionary murders case request Cage Plan eviden

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  • ISTANBUL: Judges in missionary murders case request Cage Plan eviden

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 15 2010


    Judges in missionary murders case request Cage Plan evidence files

    German Ambassador to Turkey Eckart Cuntz was in Malatya to attend the
    trial into the assassination of journalist Hrant Dink.
    The judges presiding over the trial over the murder of three Christian
    missionaries in 2007 have requested the complete evidence file in the
    investigation into the Cage Action Plan ahead of a decision over
    whether to merge the two cases.

    The panel of judges convened yesterday for the 26th hearing in the
    trial over the killing of three men working at the Zirve Publishing
    House in Malatya on April 18, 2007. In the previous hearing the panel
    of judges had said it would rule on whether to combine the files
    connected to the Cage Action Plan -- detailing secret plans by a unit
    within the military to attack and intimidate non-Muslims -- with the
    ongoing trial over the Malatya murders. The decision is a critical
    one, as the 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 Action Plan case
    indictment has already been added to the Malatya case file, and
    yesterday the panel of judges decided to request that the entire Cage
    Action Plan case evidence file be sent by the Ä°stanbul 12th High
    Criminal Court to the Malatya 3rd High Criminal Court. Following the
    review of this evidence the Malatya judges will decide whether the two
    cases should be merged.
    Observers have drawn a connection -- potentially supported by the data
    contained within the Cage Plan investigation's evidence files --
    between the murders of the Christians and the 2007 discovery of a
    cache of weapons that prompted the beginning of Turkey's trial of the
    century, involving a criminal formation known as Ergenekon nestled
    deep within the state that planned a number of acts to create the
    preconditions for a military coup d'état -- actions that might have
    gone so far as assassinating three Christian missionaries.

    The judges also accepted a request from the prosecution that the
    Malatya court request information on the prison entry date and charges
    against Erhan Ã-zel, currently held in Amasya and an eyewitness in the
    trial over the assassination of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant
    Dink. The court said it would consider whether to request the
    transcript of Ã-zel's testimony to the Ä°stanbul court and whether to
    call him to testify as a witness in Malatya as well.

    The European Union has been following developments surrounding Dink's
    assassination, the Malatya murders and the Cage Action Plan
    investigation very closely. In the courtroom yesterday attending the
    trial proceedings were Susanne Geske, the wife of the murdered German
    national, and German Ambassador to Turkey Eckart Cuntz. The next
    hearing in the Malatya case has been scheduled for June 25.

    In April 2007, Christians Necati Aydın (35), UÄ?ur Yüksel and German
    national Tilmann Ekkehart Geske (46) were tied to their chairs,
    stabbed and tortured at the Zirve Publishing House before their
    throats were slit. The publishing house they worked for printed Bibles
    and Christian literature. Among the suspects, Salih Güler, Cuma
    Ã-zdemir, Hamit Ã?eker and Abuzer Yıldırım, were caught at the crime
    scene and immediately taken into custody, while Emre Günaydın jumped
    from a third-story window while attempting to escape from the police
    and was taken into custody on a court order after a hospital stay. A
    total of nine men have been charged in connection with the murders,
    and seven of them are in jail.



    15 May 2010, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH WIRES Ä°STANBUL
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