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ANKARA: Ergenekon Coup Planner Called Army Friends For Help

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  • ANKARA: Ergenekon Coup Planner Called Army Friends For Help

    ERGENEKON COUP PLANNER CALLED ARMY FRIENDS FOR HELP

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 30 2008
    Turkey

    A number of suspects detained under suspicion of close connections
    with the Ergenekon terror organization were taken to a court in
    Ýstanbul on Saturday.

    A prime suspect in the Ergenekon terrorist organization case phoned
    higher-ranking military generals and certain judges but failed to
    secure the help he sought, Yeni Þafak reported on Tuesday.

    Last week, 33 members of a gang with links to the deep-state were
    arrested in simultaneous police raids in various cities as part of
    an investigation into an arms depot found in Ýstanbul in June of last
    year. The investigation of the Ergenekon gang has resulted in evidence
    that the gang was planning a coup d'etat for 2009. With the purpose
    of creating chaos in the country and thus an atmosphere suitable
    for a military takeover, the group staged a number of attacks and
    murders whose perpetrators remain unknown as well as others in which
    the assailants have been found.

    Evidence in the investigation suggests Ergenekon organized an attack
    on the Council of State in 2006; the murder of Armenian-Turkish
    journalist Hrant Dink in January; and the murder of three Christians
    in the city of Malatya in April of last year . Gang administrators
    are also key figures in the Susurluk accident, a 1996 car crash that
    revealed links between a police chief, a convicted ultranationalist
    fugitive and a member of Parliament.

    Yeni Þafak wrote that when Ýstanbul Police Department counterrorism
    squads were banging on the door of the Harbiye apartment of retired
    Gen. Veli Kucuk in the early morning hours of Jan. 22 to take him
    into police custody, he placed calls on his cell phone before leaving
    his home with the police officers. The police, who were monitoring
    Kucuk's phone conversations, say Kucuk made eight phone calls to
    "influential friends," telling them that the police were waiting at
    the door to take him into custody, and asked for help -- but his
    pleas for help were rejected. Police sources did not give further
    details on the content of the phone calls.

    Phone conversations between gang members

    A plot to kill Turkey's only Nobel Prize-winning author, Orhan Pamuk,
    was also among Ergenekon's plans. Newspapers printed transcripts of
    recorded phone conversations between Spc. Sgt. Muhammed Yuce, Ret.

    Col. Fikri Karadað and Selim Akkurt, the trigger-man hired to do
    the job, whose phones were tapped with a court order. Officials say
    that Yuce, who was also arrested for being part of the Ergenekon
    organization, said in a phone conversation with the hit-man that he
    had spoken to Karadað about the planned Pamuk assassination. Yuce told
    Akkuþ that an Ýstanbul businessman would financially support them as
    would a prosecutor and a judge in Ýstanbul's Kadýkoy district. Akkurt,
    who spoke in a worried tone, is quoted as saying he was concerned
    he might end up like Mehmet Ali Aðca, a deep-state assassin who also
    shot the pope in the '70s. Akkurt expressed a desire to be like O.S.,
    the teenager who shot Dink in January of last year, saying: "He has
    trillions of lira in his account. Plus, those around him have become
    heroes." In response to these words, Yuce was quoted as having said:
    "You, me and Fuci will take care of Orhan Pamuk. We will have YTL 2
    million in our accounts. Are you with me on this one?" Akkurt is heard
    giving an affirmative response to Yuce's question in the recordings.

    Shortly after his conversation with Akkurt, Yuce sent a text message
    to a relative in which he wrote: "We will take care of Orhan after
    the conference. They will put in [YTL] 5 billion into our account.

    They will give us a gas station and a villa. Sedat Peker will take
    care of us while we're in jail." Peker is an ultranationalist mafia
    leader with apparent links to deep-state figures.

    Meanwhile, Karadað is quoted in the transcripts as frequently uttering
    the phrases "We are losing the country" and "We need to set up a
    new army." However, when Zekeriya Oz, the prosecutor on the case,
    asked about the meaning of the phone conversations, Yuce replied,
    "We were only joking around on the phone."

    The investigation so far into the Ergenekon organization -- 14 of
    whose members were arrested Saturday in one of the biggest operations
    ever against deep-state-linked groups in Turkey -- has revealed that
    the organization was working to create a chaotic atmosphere so that
    its counterparts in the military could overthrow the government. All
    in all, 28 Ergenekon members are currently under arrest.

    An Ýstanbul court has accused the members of the Ergenekon gang
    of certain bombing incidents and attacks in the past two years, of
    inciting people to revolt, establishing a terrorist organization,
    of leading that terrorist organization and of membership in the
    terrorist organization.

    Documents seized during the investigation into the gang, whose members
    include former military officers, some of them high-ranking, revealed
    that they were planning to create complete chaos in the country to
    prepare fertile ground for a military coup d'etat in 2009.

    Some of the gang members against whom charges have been brought include
    Kucuk, who is also the alleged founder of a clandestine and unofficial
    intelligence unit in the gendarmerie, the existence of which is denied
    by officials; controversial ultranationalist lawyer Kemal Kerincsiz,
    who filed countless suits against Turkish writers and intellectuals
    who were at odds with Turkey's official policies; Karadað, a retired
    army colonel; and Sevgi Erenerol, the press spokesperson for a group
    called the Turkish Orthodox Patriarchate.

    Latest in the investigation

    On Monday, the case's public prosecutor objected to the release
    of nine individuals taken into custody earlier on in the Ergenekon
    investigation but later freed by the court. Late in the evening on
    Monday, the prosecution appealed the release of lawyer Fuat Turgut,
    who is currently the legal counsel of a suspect in the Dink murder,
    daily Akþam columnist Guler Komurcu, Asým Demir, Raif Gorum, Emir
    Caner Yiðit, Tanju Okan, Yaþar Aslankoylu, Anatoli Medjan and Atilla
    Aksu. Representatives of Kerincsiz also appealed his arrest. The
    Ýstanbul 13th Higher Criminal Court will review the appeals from
    both sides.

    --Boundary_(ID_Kyz+pH5R1zQsC0vriYIkAA)--
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