Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Retired Turkish General In Court On Coup-Plot Charges

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Retired Turkish General In Court On Coup-Plot Charges

    RETIRED TURKISH GENERAL IN COURT ON COUP-PLOT CHARGES

    The National
    March 27, 2012 Tuesday
    UAE

    Turkey's then Chief of Staff General Ilker Basbug, centre, follows
    a guard of honour during a symbolic visit with his classmates who
    graduated from War College in 1962 to the mausoleum of Mustafa Kemal
    Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey, in Ankara in 2010.

    Thomas Seibert

    ISTANBUL // Just two years ago he was one of the most powerful men in
    Turkey. Yesterday, retired General Ilker Basbug became Turkey's first
    former chief of general staff to appear before a civilian court as
    a defendant, charged with overseeing a coup plot to bring down the
    elected government.

    Prosecutors have said Gen Basbug, 68, who served as Turkey's chief
    of general staff from 2008 until his retirement in 2010, became the
    leader of a terrorist organisation by ordering an internet propaganda
    campaign to undermine the government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the
    prime minister.

    Gen Basbug has been in pretrial detention since January.

    The prosecution is asking for a prison sentence of up to 22 and a
    half years. Gen Basbug has denied the charges. The dozens of other
    defendants in the trial include several former generals.

    As Gen Basbug entered the courtroom in a prison complex in Silivri
    outside Istanbul yesterday, civilian and milistary spectators in the
    room rose to their feet and greeted the former military chief with
    long applause, according to Turkish news reports.

    Gen Basbug acknowledged the applause with a nod and a wave of his
    hand, the reports said, as one co-defendant, Hasan Igsiz, a former
    general who served under Gen Basbug in the general staff, held open
    the door to the defendants' enclosure for his former boss.

    Ilkay Sezer, Gen Basbug's lawyer, asked the court to transfer his
    client's case to a special tribunal formed by the constitutional court
    for the trial of high-ranking officials. The court rejected the demand.

    Gen Basbug is accused of being responsible for military-run websites
    designed to spread propaganda against the government, set up with a
    document known in the media as the internet Memorandum. Since last
    September, 30 suspects have been standing trial in connection with
    a total of 42 now-defunct websites, which also spread propaganda
    against minorities such as Greeks and Armenians.

    The general staff in Ankara confirmed that the websites were set up
    under its auspices, but said the spread of anti-government propaganda
    was the result of individual officers overstepping their orders. But
    several defendants told the court the responsibility was in the
    hands of the military leadership, according to news reports. The
    trial is connected to a wide-ranging investigation against members
    of a suspected organisation, called Ergenekon, that prosecutors have
    said included coup-plotters inside and outside the armed forces.

    Turkey's military, which pushed four governments from office in the
    past 50 years, has lost much of its political influence in recent
    years. In 2007, the strictly secularist armed forces threatened to
    unseat the Islamist-rooted government of Mr Erdogan, but a subsequent
    landslide victory by Mr Erdogan in a general election dealt a heavy
    blow to the military. Last year, Mr Erdogan scored another political
    victory when he forced almost the entire general staff to resign.

    Opponents of Mr Erdogan have argued that the government was using
    special criminal courts like the one in Silivri for a campaign aimed at
    weakening the military. Yesterday, retired Col Hasan Ataman Yildirim, a
    defendant in the case involving Gen Basbug, turned to Turkish reporters
    in the courtroom and said the trial would not remain unanswered, in
    comments that included a veiled reference to a South American-style
    military intervention.

    "Those behind this trial will one day be tried in an even bigger
    courtroom," Mr Yildirim said, according to news reports, "maybe even
    in a stadium".

Working...
X