Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: No investigation into Ergenekon prosecutors - Justice Min

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: No investigation into Ergenekon prosecutors - Justice Min

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Sept 13 2008


    No investigation into Ergenekon prosecutors, Justice Ministry announces


    A statement from the press office of Justice Minister Mehmet Ali
    Å?ahin on Friday announced that his ministry had denied a
    request to initiate an investigation into prosecutors working on the
    case of Ergenekon, a neo-nationalist gang believed to be the extension
    of a clandestine network of groups with members in the armed forces
    that planned to overthrow the government.

    The possibility of launching a probe into the prosecutors conducting
    the Ergenekon investigation had raised concerns in Turkey, where legal
    proceedings against courageous judges and prosecutors fighting shadowy
    dealings within the state structure are commonplace. However, the
    statement released yesterday said the ministry had completed a review
    of complaints filed against the prosecutors on the case and found no
    reason to start an investigation. The statement said there was no
    evidence indicating that the prosecutors have abused their duty,
    authority or powers during the course of the investigation, and thus
    no need for an investigation into any of them.

    Ergenekon gang suspects currently in jail pending trial include
    ex-army generals, academics, journalists and bosses of the crime
    world.

    In the past, another prosecutor in a similar situation, Van prosecutor
    Ferhat Sarıkaya -- who was investigating a bookstore bombing on
    Nov 9. 2005 in the township of Å?emdinli in the southeastern
    province of Hakkari, perpetrated by two-noncommissioned officers and a
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) member-turned-informant -- was
    disbarred by a higher judicial body supervising judges' and
    prosecutors' dealings after indicting YaÅ?ar
    BüyükanÄ&#x B1;t, the then-land forces commander who was
    later promoted to chief of general staff.

    Several legal figures had expressed concern earlier that the review of
    complaints for a probe by the ministry might lead Ergenekon
    prosecutors to the same fate as former Van prosecutor Sarıkaya.


    What is Ergenekon?
    The existence of Ergenekon, a behind-the-scenes network attempting to
    use social and psychological engineering to shape the country in
    accordance with its own ultranationalist ideology, has long been
    suspected, but the current investigation into the group began only in
    2007, when a house in Ä°stanbul's Ã`mraniye district that was
    being used as an arms depot was discovered by police.

    The investigation was expanded to reveal elements of what in Turkey is
    called the deep state, finally proving the existence of the network,
    which is currently being accused of trying to incite chaos and
    disorder in order to trigger a coup against the Justice and
    Development Party (AK Party) government.

    The indictment made public in July claims that the Ergenekon network
    is behind a series of political assassinations carried out over the
    past two decades. The victims include a secularist journalist,
    UÄ?ur Mumcu, long believed to have been assassinated by Islamic
    extremists in 1993; the head of a business conglomerate, Ã-zdemir
    Sabancı, who was shot dead by militants of the extreme-left
    Revolutionary People's Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C) in his
    high-security office in 1996; secularist academic Necip
    HablemitoÄ?lu, who was also believed to have been killed by
    Islamic extremists, in 2002; and a 2006 attack on the Council of State
    that left a senior judge dead. Alparslan Arslan, found guilty of the
    Council of State killing, said he attacked the court in protest of an
    anti-headscarf ruling it had made. But the indictment contains
    evidence that he was connected with Ergenekon and that his family
    received large sums of money from unidentified sources after the
    shooting.

    Eighty-six suspects, 47 of whom are currently under arrest, are
    accused of having suspicious links to the gang. Suspects will start
    appearing before the court on Oct. 20 and will face accusations that
    include "membership in an armed terrorist group," "attempting to bring
    down the government," "inciting people to rebel against the Republic
    of Turkey" and other similar crimes.

    The indictment also says Veli Küçük, believed to
    be one of the leading members of the network, had threatened Hrant
    Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist slain by a teenager in 2007,
    before his murder -- a sign that Ergenekon could be behind that murder
    as well.

    13 September 2008, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN Ä°STANBUL
Working...
X