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ANKARA: Civil Society Demands Trial Of Coup Generals

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  • ANKARA: Civil Society Demands Trial Of Coup Generals

    CIVIL SOCIETY DEMANDS TRIAL OF COUP GENERALS

    Today's Zaman
    Sept 12 2008
    Turkey

    Civil society organizations have become more adamant in their demand
    that those involved in the Sept. 12, 1980 coup d'état be brought
    to trial after being encouraged by an investigation launched into
    the Ergenekon terror organization, a shadowy network whose members
    with links to the state hierarchy allegedly worked to overthrow the
    government and lay the groundwork for a new period of military rule
    in Turkey.

    Today, on the 28th anniversary of the coup, there will be many
    demonstrations throughout Turkey, particularly in Ä°stanbul, Ä°zmir,
    Ankara, Diyarbakır and Malatya, organized by various civil society
    and rights organizations.

    The participants will highlight the fact that the mentality of the
    Sept. 12 coup is still alive today -- as is proven by the Ergenekon
    case -- and that those responsible for the coup should be brought to
    justice, just as suspects in the Ergenekon case will be.

    The first hearing in the case of Ergenekon, which is accused of
    orchestrating various murders and attacks with the intention
    of creating chaos that would trigger a coup, is scheduled for
    October. Among the suspects are three retired senior generals,
    including former Gendarmerie Forces Commander Gen. Å~^ener Eruygur,
    mafia bosses and public figures such as politicians, journalists and
    academics. This is the first time in recent Turkish history that
    a top commander -- retired or on active duty -- is facing charges
    within the justice system. The generals of the Sept. 12, 1980 coup,
    however, have never been called to account for the atrocities of the
    brutal regime they led after granting immunity to themselves through
    clauses in the constitution they drafted, which remains in place to
    the present day. The Constitution has been amended many times since
    then, but the provisions protecting the former generals have been
    left unchanged. The one prosecutor, Sacit Kayasu, who campaigned to
    change them, was permanently disbarred.

    Civil society groups are planning protests around the country to
    condemn the coup, with many using the slogan "Ergenekon trial not
    good enough, Sept. 12 must be tried, too." The largest demonstration
    is expected to be staged in Ä°stanbul on Sunday. The organizers,
    which include the Confederation of Revolutionary Workers' Unions
    (DÄ°SK), the Confederation of Public Sector Trade Unions (KESK),
    the Freedom and Solidarity Party (ODP), the Democratic Society Party
    (DTP) and the Socialist Platform of the Oppressed (ESP), will urge the
    public to meet in Istanbul's Kadıköy Square to unite in demanding
    that the coup generals be brought to justice.

    Sinan Tutal, the chairman of the ODP's Istanbul branch, said the
    ongoing Ergenekon investigation and upcoming trial are only a small
    part of a phenomenon often described in Turkey as the deep state, a
    term used to refer to shadowy relations between the mafia, politicians,
    intelligence agencies and security forces, usually governed by
    ultranationalist groups that have their own political agenda.

    "Democracy will never fully be established in Turkey as long as
    the perpetrators of the Sept. 12 coup d'état are not brought to
    justice. We will never be able to dismantle the deep state, and the
    Sept. 12 Constitution will remain in place," Tutal stated. He also
    accused the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) of not
    having any real intention of bringing those responsible for the coup
    to justice.

    Another large demonstration will occur Saturday in Ä°zmir's
    Gundogan Square and Ankara's Sıhhiye Square, in addition to smaller
    demonstrations in the cities of Gaziantep, Malatya and Bursa.

    Conscience Tribunal

    The coalition known as "70 Million Steps Against Coups," a platform
    bringing together many civil society groups, will today hold a
    "Conscience Tribunal" in which it will symbolically try the Sept. 12
    coup generals and its leader, Gen. Evren, who is living out his
    retirement years quietly in the holiday resort town of Marmaris,
    where he has taken up painting as a hobby.

    The coalition is made up of the Amargi Women's Cooperative,
    the Anti-capitalist Group, the Women's Rights Association against
    Discrimination (AKDER), the Peace Council, the We Are Looking after
    Each Other Platform, the Confederation of Turkish Real Trade Unions
    (Hak-Ä°Å~_), the Helsinki Citizens Association (HYD), the We Are
    Not Free Yet Platform, the Proletariat Movement Party (EHP), the
    Revolutionary Socialist Workers' Party (DSÄ°P), the Young Civilians,
    the Initiative to Say No to Racism and Nationalism, the Global Action
    Group (KEG), the Lambda Istanbul LGBTT Solidarity Association, the
    Association of Human Rights and Solidarity for Oppressed Peoples
    (MAZLUM-DER), the Socialist Democracy Party (SDP), the Political
    Horizon Movement and the Confrontation Association.

    The initiative, which recently organized other mass protests against
    coups and coup attempts in Ä°stanbul and Ankara, in a statement
    about the Conscience Tribunal, underlined that the Constitution that
    was drafted after the 1980 coup is a constant reminder of all the
    violations of the generals involved in the coup.

    "Turkey has not yet been able to bring [the perpetrators of]
    Sept. 12 to justice, although the mentality of the Sept. 12 regime
    will be before a court in the Ergenekon trial," a statement from the
    coalition read.

    Å~^enol KarakaÅ~_, a spokesperson for the initiative, recalled that
    demonstrations against the Sept. 12 coup in the past were largely
    ineffective, adding that he hopes this will change this year due to
    the ongoing Ergenekon trial.

    "Various demonstrations were also organized in the past, but they
    mostly were about calling attention to the anguish and pain caused
    to victims. Today, the obvious connection between anti-democratic
    interventions, gangs and coups is much more visible and out in the
    open," KarakaÅ~_ said.

    The defendants in the Conscience Tribunal include generals Evren,
    Sedat Celasun, Nurettin Ersin, Tahsin Å~^ahinkaya and Nejat Tumer. The
    indictment will be read aloud by Engin Cinmen, the lawyer who organized
    the "One Minute of Darkness for Light Forever" protest after the
    Susurluk affair in 1996, when a car crash revealed questionable
    relations between a deputy, a police chief and a mafia boss. The
    campaign was Turkey's first mass protest, with thousands in many
    cities turning off their lights for a minute to show their opposition
    to deep state formations. Some of the suspects in the Susurluk affair
    are currently also suspects in the Ergenekon case.

    The opening speech in the mock trial will be delivered by Fethiye
    Cetin, a lawyer for the family of the Armenian-Turkish journalist
    Hrant Dink, who was allegedly threatened by retired Gen. Veli Kucuk,
    a key Ergenekon suspect, shortly before he was shot dead in January
    of last year by an ultranationalist teenager. Several intellectuals
    who witnessed some of the atrocities of the coup period will relate
    their experiences as part of the day's activities. There will also
    be a protest march called "No to Coups."

    Other civil society organizations such as the '78ers Association,
    whose members were victims of the 1980 coup, will organize mass
    protests in a number of cities during the week. The main theme of
    their protests will be Diyarbakır Prison, which, allegedly, was the
    scene of human rights violations and torture during the Sept. 12 coup
    and which some analysts consider to be the place that gave birth to
    the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

    In addition to the social democratic, democratic, socialist and
    left-wing groups, right-wing organizations such as the Grand Unity
    Party (BBP) will be among today's protestors. The BBP Ä°stanbul branch
    will organize an evening commemoration ceremony for the Sept. 12
    victims and will condemn the coup.

    ------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------

    Crimes committed by coup generals According to Husnu Ondul, chairman
    of the Human Rights Association (Ä°HD) -- which was established in
    1986 mainly to address serious and systematic violations of human
    rights under military rule -- it is possible to observe the effects
    of the coup in every area of life even today, but the costs of it
    were highest in the immediate aftermath.

    In Ondul's words, during the coup "49 people were executed, 171 people
    were killed by torture and 650 detained for long periods, most of
    whom were subjected to torture. In the military courts 210,000 cases
    were opened; 85,000 people faced charges for thought crimes; 1,683,000
    people were categorized by the state on the basis of their political
    and religious beliefs. Prosecutors demanded capital punishment for
    6,353 persons; 348,000 people were banned from traveling abroad;
    14,509 civil servants were fired under the State of Emergency Law;
    18,000 civil servants, 2,000 judges, 4,000 policemen and 5,000
    teachers were forced to resign; 23,667 associations were banned,
    while political parties and unions were shut down. More than 30,000
    people were forced to leave Turkey. Thirty-nine tons of books were
    destroyed, and 937 movies were banned; eight newspapers were closed
    down for a period of 195 days." He added that the political, economic
    and social effects of the coup are still evident today due to 675
    laws currently in force that were passed during the coup regime.

    --Boundary_(ID_xKPDpPw3WCHqwr/KT58GWQ)--
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