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ANKARA: Ergenekon And Scenarios

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  • ANKARA: Ergenekon And Scenarios

    ERGENEKON AND SCENARIOS

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Aug 5 2013

    TUÄ~^BA AYDIN

    The Ä°stanbul 13th High Criminal Court announced its verdict in the
    Ergenekon case on Monday.

    Before the hearing, security forces took tight security measures
    around Silivri Prison, where the jailed suspects in the Ergenekon
    case are being held. There are currently 276 suspects on trial in
    the Ergenekon case, the first and most important deep state and coup
    investigation that began five years ago in Turkey. A full 576 hearings
    have already been held, and for these hearings 39,000 pages of notes
    have been taken. Columnists have been discussing the necessity of
    the Ergenekon trial and its influence.

    Bugun's Adem Yavuz Arslan says that over five years the public has
    lost interest in such a crucial case and people have been confused
    by disinformation from people who support Ergenekon suspects. Arslan
    asks what would the situation would be now if the Ergenekon operation
    had been able to achieve its aim. As an answer, he refers to the
    Ergenekon plans for the assassination of people from high judicial
    bodies and Armenian and Alevi religious officials, for clashes on the
    streets and scenarios for Alevi-Sunni conflict. According to Arslan,
    the investigation into the Ergenekon operation is superficial, saying
    that the initiators of that operation have been determined but its
    structure has not been fully revealed yet.

    Star columnist Erse KarakaÅ~_ criticizes lawyers who claim that the
    Ergenekon plan was never put into effect and therefore we cannot
    call this plan a crime. KarakaÅ~_ writes that people who prepared
    such a large-scale plan should be punished by the court. KarakaÅ~_
    also says if the Ergenekon plan had been put into effect, it would
    have been impossible to prevent a coup by the armed forces.

    Taraf's Namık Cınar blames the government for being hypocritical,
    saying that it has ignored all of the crimes made by the terrorist
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which has been active in the country
    for 30 years, so as not to ruin the settlement process. Cınar says
    if the PKK, which has committed a large number of felonies, are not
    punished, a contradiction will appear as it's easier for the government
    to call the armed forces to account.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/columnistDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=322806

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