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  • Dozens Of Officers Detained In Turkey

    DOZENS OF OFFICERS DETAINED IN TURKEY

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    23.02.2010 11:10 GMT+04:00

    PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey's once all-powerful military is facing the
    biggest challenge to its authority in decades after 49 senior officers
    were detained on accusations of plotting to topple the country's
    Islamist-rooted government in a violent coup.

    A former deputy chief of the army, a retired air force chief, the
    chief of the navy and several generals and admirals were among those
    detained by police in a sweep carried out in eight Turkish cities. The
    round-up included 17 retired generals, four serving admirals and 27
    lower-ranking officers.

    The detentions dramatically raised the ante in a rumbling power
    struggling between the Justice and Development party (AKP) government
    and the armed forces, and prompted the army chief of staff, General
    Ilker Basbug, to call off a trip to Egypt.

    They represented the boldest assault yet on the military's elevated
    status by prosecutors, who have been investigating alleged conspiracies
    by secularists to unseat the AKP for more than two years.

    The army, which has dispatched four governments in the past 50 years,
    was once considered all but untouchable in its role as custodian of
    Turkey's secular state.

    Several high-ranking officers, including retired generals, are
    already being tried on accusations of belonging to a movement known
    as Ergenekon, which is said to have plotted a military coup by stoking
    civil unrest. Journalists, academics, lawyers and politicians are also
    accused of being part of Ergenekon, which the government has depicted
    as a cabal of secular elitists determined to maintain their privileges.

    Although there was no official explanation, the latest arrests appeared
    to stem from a separate alleged coup plot, known as Sledgehammer,
    revealed by a Turkish newspaper, Taraf, last month.

    According to testimony in 5,000 pages of stolen army documents, the
    plan - dating from 2003 - envisaged a putsch against the AKP after a
    campaign of destabilization involving bombing mosques and provoking
    a war with Greece. The army has denied the documents represented a
    coup plot and instead described them as a "scenario".

    On a visit to Spain Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    refused to comment on the latest developments, saying: "It would not
    be appropriate for me to talk about an issue that is already handled
    by the judiciary."

    But critics will depict the detentions as part of a witch-hunt by the
    AKP aimed at politicizing the judiciary, undermining the military
    and weakening the secular constitution handed down by Ataturk, the
    founder of modern Turkey.

    The arrests follow a row over the detention last week of the
    chief prosecutor of the north-eastern province of Erzincan, Ilhan
    Cilhaner, on charges of belonging to Ergenekon after he had ordered
    an investigation of an Islamist group. Cilhaner's arrest prompted
    the strongly pro-secularist Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors
    to strip the powers of the special prosecutor who had ordered it.

    The detentions also followed a ruling last month by Turkey's highest
    court, the constitutional court, overturning government legislation
    that would have allowed serving military officers to be tried in
    civilian courts, rather than military tribunals as at present.

    Analysts suggested that the arrests were aimed at trying officers
    before the constitutional court's ruling could be recorded in the
    official gazette, when it would become effective.

    Gareth Jenkins, an Istanbul-based specialist on Turkish military
    affairs, said the arrests could trigger a major crisis. "The
    prosecutors have four days to turn these detentions into formal
    arrests and if they do that, there is no way the army will sit back
    and not respond. This is a power struggle between two authoritarian
    forces. The agenda behind Ergenekon is to reduce the power of the
    military," he said, guardian.co.uk reported.
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