Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: European Parliament wants full disclosure of Ergenekon

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

  • ANKARA: European Parliament wants full disclosure of Ergenekon

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 28 2008



    European Parliament wants full disclosure of Ergenekon


    The European Parliament has insisted that Turkey should firmly
    investigate the shadowy Ergenekon network and this network's
    connections within the state, while also urging authorities to take
    pains in regards to offering a fair trial to defendants in this case.

    The Ergenekon gang, a neo-nationalist group accused of involvement in
    plans to stage a violent uprising against the government, was
    discovered at the end of an investigation that came upon the heels of
    a police raid in June of last year that uncovered an arms depot in a
    house in Ä°stanbul's Ã`mraniye district. The prosecutor in
    the Ergenekon case has said the gang worked to create disorder and
    chaos through divisive and violent acts so that the public would be
    willing to accept a military intervention to restore order.

    The group is suspected of involvement in the murder of three Christian
    missionaries in Malatya in 2007, the 2006 murder of a priest in the
    northern city of Trabzon, the murder of ethnic Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink in 2007, a 2006 attack on the Council of State and a
    grenade attack on the Cumhuriyet daily in 2006. The 20th session in
    the trial of 86 suspects on charges of involvement in Ergenekon was
    held yesterday before the 13th High Criminal Court in Ä°stanbul,
    with the suspects continuing to provide their defense testimonies.

    »» To access original text of the report, please click
    here.

    The European Parliament "welcomes the beginning of the trial against
    those accused of being members of the Ergenekon criminal organization;
    encourages the authorities to continue investigations and to fully
    uncover the organization's networks which reach into the state
    structures; is concerned about reports regarding the treatment of
    defendants in this case; urges the Turkish authorities to provide them
    with a fair trial and to adhere strictly to the principles of the rule
    of law," said a draft report penned by Dutch Christian Democrat
    European Parliamentarian Ria Oomen-Ruijten.

    The first debate on the draft report, which is expected to be amended
    several times before approval by the European Parliament, will be held
    on Tuesday, Oomen-Ruijten, who had talks with Turkish leaders in
    Ankara earlier this week, told reporters.

    The draft includes serious warnings for the Turkish government, which
    is harshly criticized for not putting forward "a consistent and
    comprehensive program of political reforms, despite its strong
    mandate."

    Voicing concern to "see in Turkey, for the third consecutive year, a
    continuous slowdown of the reform process," the draft "called on the
    Turkish government to prove its political will to continue the reform
    process to which it committed itself in 2005."

    Another concern highlighted in the draft was the ongoing polarization
    within Turkish society and between the main political parties, which
    Oomen-Ruijten said that has deepened in the course of 2008 and has
    negatively affected the functioning of political institutions and the
    process of reforms.

    Stressing that political reforms are at the heart of the reform
    process, the European Parliament noted that no comprehensive program
    of political reforms has been adopted by the government.

    Even though it has been almost four years since the EU agreed that
    Turkey had sufficiently fulfilled the Copenhagen criteria related to
    democracy and the rule of law and was able to open negotiations for
    full membership, talks have stalled due to a perceived slowdown in the
    pace of the Turkish government's political reforms.

    Under the heading "Fulfilling the Copenhagen Criteria; Democracy and
    the rule of law," the European Parliament voiced "regrets that the
    initial effort to reform comprehensively the constitution resulted in
    dispute over the headscarf issue and generated further polarization of
    society; calls on the Turkish government to resume its work on a new,
    civilian constitution which would place the protection of human rights
    and fundamental freedoms at its core, and urges the government to
    ensure that political parties and civil society, as well as ethnic and
    religious minorities, are closely involved in this constitutive
    process."

    The pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP), which is facing a
    closure case before the Constitutional Court on charges of becoming a
    focal point for separatist activities, has also been warned by the
    European Parliament, which has asked the party to make clear their
    position vis-à-vis the terrorist activities of the outlawed
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

    "The European Parliament urges the DTP and all its elected members to
    distance themselves clearly from the PKK and its terrorist activities,
    and appeals to all parties to contribute to a solution that enhances
    the stability, prosperity and integrity of the Turkish state," the
    draft says, while also calling on the Turkish government "to launch as
    a matter of priority a political initiative favoring a lasting
    settlement of the Kurdish issue, which initiative needs to address the
    economic and social opportunities of citizens of Kurdish origin, and
    to tangibly improve their cultural rights, including real
    possibilities to learn Kurdish within the public and private schooling
    system and to use it in broadcasting, in daily life and in access to
    public services."

    Calling the PKK a terrorist group and clearly condemning its violent
    attacks, the European Parliament reiterated its solidarity with Turkey
    in the fight against terrorism and once again called on the PKK to
    declare and respect an immediate and unconditional ceasefire.

    Ankara's rapprochement with Iraqi Kurds, meanwhile, was appreciated in
    the draft report.

    "The European Parliament welcomes the communication and cooperation
    developed over the last year between Turkish and Iraqi authorities,
    including the contacts between Turkey and the Kurdish regional
    government; encourages those authorities to further intensify their
    cooperation, so as to ensure that terrorist attacks from Iraqi
    territory are prevented under Iraqi responsibility, to guarantee
    stability and to contribute to the economic development of the whole
    Turkish-Iraqi neighborhood area; recalls its earlier appeals to the
    Turkish government to respect, when conducting anti-terrorist
    operations, Iraq's territorial integrity, human rights and the rule of
    law, and to make sure that civilian casualties are avoided," the draft
    says.



    28 November 2008, Friday
    SELÃ?UK GÃ`LTAÅ?LI BRUSSELS
Working...
X