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Turkey Busts Alleged Murder Network

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  • Turkey Busts Alleged Murder Network

    TIME Magazine
    Jan 28 2008



    Turkey Busts Alleged Murder Network
    Monday, Jan. 28, 2008 By PELIN TURGUT/ISTANBUL

    Turkey's Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk might sleep a
    little easier tonight - or not. A series of dramatic arrests over the
    weekend has laid bare what is alleged to be a shadowy network of
    ultra-nationalist killers with connections in high places. Their hit
    list allegedly included the famous writer, targeted for speaking out
    about Turkey's patchy treatment of its minorities.

    The allegations, widely reported by Turkish newspapers, are certainly
    as dark as anything Pamuk ever wrote. Istanbul prosecutors have
    arrested 13 people, including a former general and a high-profile
    lawyer, on charges of "provoking armed rebellion against the
    government". They are suspected of involvement in last year's string
    of nationalist-motivated murders, which cost the lives of prominent
    ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink and three Christian
    missionaries, according to newspapers.

    Police picked up the trail that led to the weekend arrests last
    summer when they raided a house in a rundown Istanbul district that
    revealed a stockpile of weapons and explosives. A number of
    low-ranking military officials were subsequently detained. The
    military, a powerful behind-the-scenes force in Turkey, weighed in
    and a gag order was placed on investigators. Little more was reported
    until a dramatic 3 a.m. raid last week on houses across Istanbul, in
    which 40 people were detained.

    Of those, Veli Kucuk, a retired major general, was allegedly plotting
    to kill Pamuk, Turkish newspapers reported. Kucuk is suspected of
    running a secret unit within police forces that carried out bombings
    and killings for which other groups were widely blamed. Also arrested
    was Kemal Kerincsiz, a nationalist lawyer responsible for numerous
    cases against Pamuk, Dink and other intellectuals. None of the
    suspects have spoken about the charges.

    "If they are true, it suggests there are two parallel universes in
    Turkey," says Hakan Altinay, director of the Open Society Institute,
    a think tank. "There are people who wake up every morning and plan
    murders of political opponents, plot coups and how to destabilize the
    country," he said.

    Most Turks have long suspected the existence of a covert web of
    elements within the security forces and bureaucracy who act outside
    the law to uphold their own political ends. There is even a household
    name for it: the "deep state", referring to a state within the state.


    Newspapers have suggested that this network is the Turkish remnant of
    Gladio, a Cold War-era program, orchestrated by the U.S. in several
    NATO countries, to create a covert paramilitary force to counter
    Communist activities.

    The arrests are a milestone for Turkey: Kucuk is the first general
    officer in recent Turkish history to be brought in by police for
    questioning, newspapers said.

    But the audacity and sheer scope of the allegations raises the
    unsettling question of whether the individuals arrested might just be
    the tip of the iceberg. "Who gave the orders? Who protected them for
    this long?" says Altinay. "We are faced with the possibility that
    this network existed. And, even worse, that it might still exist."
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