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ANKARA: Bomb Seizures Highlight Need For Rule Of Law To Be Enforced

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  • ANKARA: Bomb Seizures Highlight Need For Rule Of Law To Be Enforced

    BOMB SEIZURES HIGHLIGHT NEED FOR RULE OF LAW TO BE ENFORCED

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    June 16 2007

    The recent confiscation of hand grenades at a house in Ýstanbul's
    Umraniye district, with police taking into custody three suspects,
    including retired noncommissioned officer Oktay Y, the provincial
    chairman of the right-wing organization Kuvayi Milliye (National
    Forces), has again raised the need for urgent action to be taken by
    the government and the judiciary over gangs and other matters related
    to the incidents.

    The Umraniye incident has also hinted at a link with the bombing
    staged against daily Cumhuriyet in May 2006 as the security for-ces
    have been probing the link.

    The serial number of the seized grenades and bombs made by the
    state-owned Machines and Chemical Industries Board (MKEK) used in
    attacks against Cumhuriyet daily were reportedly the same.

    Counterterrorism teams confiscated 27 hand grenades during a raid in
    Umraniye on June 13. The grenades were reportedly military property
    and are thought to have been stolen from military warehouses.

    Security forces found 27 hand grenades and 18 detonators in a box kept
    in the attic. Mehmet D. was identified as the landlord who leased the
    house to his nephew Ali Y. The police arrested both Mehmet D. and
    Ali Y. Prior investigations revealed that Alparslan Arslan -- the
    prime suspect in the State Council attack last year in which he is
    alleged to have shot and killed a top judge -- and his accomplices
    used stolen grenades in their attack on the newspaper.

    Reports indicate that military authorities will be consulted in
    regards to the captured armaments.

    Oktay Y. actively participated in anti-EU rallies and demonstrations
    staged during the trials of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink,
    academic and author Elif Þafak as well as author and Nobel Prize winner
    Orhan Pamuk, who were all prosecuted under the infamous Article 301
    of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK).

    The suspects alleged that Oktay Y. brought the grenades to their
    house. Acting on this testimony, the police took Oktay Y. into custody.

    He had retired due to a disability in connection with his duty
    in southeastern Turkey against the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)
    terrorist organization.

    Within the investigation the General Staff will be asked whether the
    grenades are registered in the army inventory. The suspects will be
    interrogated by the counterterrorism squad's C Desk, which specializes
    in rightist organizations.

    Three bombs are missing

    Mehmet D. told the police during his interrogation that the hand
    grenades were brought to the house in Umraniye in 2005 by the former
    noncommissioned officer Oktay Y. "Oktay Y. has constantly been in
    touch with retired Cap. Muzaffer Tekin, retired Gen. Veli Kucuk
    and Bekir Ozturk, one of the founding members of the Kuvayi Milliye
    branch in Mersin," Mehmet D. reportedly told to the police. Meanwhile
    counterterrorism squads have found that three hand grenades were
    missing in the military ammunition bag found during the Umraniye
    raiding. A senior security official told the media that those
    missing three hand grenades might be the ones used in attacks against
    Cumhuriyet.

    Grenades reveal web of dark relations once again

    Retired Cap. Tekin, who was suspected of instigating the attack
    against the Council of State last year but later released due to
    insufficient evidence, spoke to several dailies, stating he knew the
    retired noncommissioned officer Oktay Y. as a "correct man."

    "Those grenades are scrap, they will not kill," he said.

    According to Tekin, Oktay Y. has now been continuing his struggle
    in thought ending his armed struggle following his retirement from
    the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK). Tekin defended himself and Oktay
    Y., saying he liked him as if he were his son, claiming that those
    accusing them were attempting to damage them and the TSK down through
    the usage of their names. Those accusing them of being involved in
    illegal activities "will not be able to play the same game that they
    played earlier. These are all complicities," Tekin warned.

    Turkish dailies reported Friday that former member of Police Special
    Forces Ýbrahim Þahin, whose name was implicated in the Susurluk
    gang scandal in 1996, has allegedly introduced Tekin and Oktay Y. to
    each other.

    A picture showing the provincial chairman of Kuvayi Milliye, Oktay Y.,
    who was taken into custody in connection with grenades seized in a
    house in Umraniye district, retired Cap. Tekin and retired Col.

    Fikri Karadað, also the chairman of a Kuvayi Milliye association
    branch and known for taking his oath over a pistol, published in Sabah
    daily on Friday. According to the paper the picture was suspected
    of being taken in 2003 in Ýstanbul's Þile suburb during a meeting of
    the so-called "Ulusalcýlar Nationalists."

    Oktay Y. also had his picture taken with Tekin as well as retired
    Gen. Veli Kucuk, who was also implicated in an attack against the
    Council of State, Sabah reported.

    The Kuvayi Milliye organization was a paramilitary group during World
    War I with no legal basis. The members of this organization were used
    by the state on and off during that time. But the same Kuvayi Milliye
    rebelled against the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire.

    Today's Kuvayi Milliye groupings have frequently been linked to
    dubious activities -- as is the case most recently in Umraniye --
    including the Atabeyler gang and attacks on the Council of State and
    on daily Cumhuriyet.

    The Ulusalcýlar Nationalists, also known as the "Kýzýl Elma Koalisyonu"
    (Red Apple Coalition) or Kuvayi Milliye, of today is composed of
    various segments of society: retired officers, former police chiefs,
    civil servants, lawyers and journalists targeting to destabilize the
    country under the guise of a so-called fight against an Islamic state
    that the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party), with its
    conservative roots, could allegedly install.

    This is despite the fact that it has been during AK Party rule that
    Turkey has witnessed major democratic reforms, though many were
    not felt on ground. The above mentioned groups are also anti-US, as
    well as anti-EU, the latter in marked contrast to Turkey's accession
    ambition. Those groups are of the belief that EU reforms are aimed
    at disintegrating Turkey.

    'A strong will required for fighting illegal acts'

    The Umraniye incident and the link between retired officers in illegal
    activities have once again raised questions over how such notorious
    activities can be stopped and the rule of law installed.

    Associate Professor Umit Kardaþ, a retired military judge and lawyer,
    told Today's Zaman there needs to be strong political will to fight
    against such illegal groups. "Strong political leadership should be
    able to trace the root causes of illegal groups to install the rule
    of law in the country. In the fight against illegal activities, the
    government, Parliament and media should be mobilized to pave the way
    for democracy," he stressed.

    Lawyer Ergin Cinmen of the Ýstanbul Bar Association, meanwhile, told
    Bia Net Web site on June 14 that the Umraniye incident has once again
    revealed that such acts were no longer "deep," or hidden, but taking
    place openly.

    "If such relationships [among ex officers in illegal activities]
    are not prevented they will become stronger and will become the
    state itself. We will see how the security teams and prosecutors'
    office will deal with this issue. Are we going to let it go with the
    tip of the iceberg or will a deep investigation be made?" he said.

    --Boundary_(ID_+PaGszAGZjG3J0roRvVVwQ)--
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