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Turkey 'Coup Plotters' Face Chaotic Scenes In Court

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  • Turkey 'Coup Plotters' Face Chaotic Scenes In Court

    TURKEY 'COUP PLOTTERS' FACE CHAOTIC SCENES IN COURT
    By Damien McElroy, Foreign Affairs Correspondent

    Daily Telegraph
    9:43PM BST 20 Oct 2008
    UK

    Dozens of opposition activists accused of seeking to bring about the
    collapse of the Turkish state went on trial in Istanbul yesterday as
    their supporters massed in the streets in protest.

    Chaotic scenes surrounded the opening of the trial of 86 people
    including high-ranking officials alleged to be involved in a
    conspiracy designed to create social turmoil. Prosecutors unveiled
    a 2,500-page indictment that detailed activities that ranged from
    murder and terrorist plots to schemes to plant black propaganda in
    popular newspapers.

    However the trial was quickly adjourned as the court was overwhelmed
    by sympathisers who sought to disrupt the proceedings.

    The alleged conspirators include a retired general, the leader of a
    small Leftist and nationalist party, a newspaper editor, a best-selling
    author and a former university dean. Two more retired senior generals
    have been questioned in connection with the plot.

    Prosecutors said that the ultimate aim was to depose the Islamic AK
    party, which has ruled Turkey since 2003. The conspirators were said
    to believe the party was bent on destroying Turkey's secular state
    system, which replaced the theocratic Ottoman empire in 1923.

    One defendant spoke out against the charges as a politically inspired
    charade. "An imaginary group has been invented," Muzaffer Tekin,
    a retired army captain, told the judges. "I see this as a political
    plot."

    The existence of the so-called "deep state" underground plot has held
    the public in thrall for months and judges were forced to suspend the
    opening session after the courtroom on the outskirts of Istanbul was
    mobbed. The plotters are alleged to have adopted the name, Ergenekon,
    from a legend of a lone wolf of the Central Asian steppe and the
    leitmotif of Turkish nationalism.

    Although senior military figures were said to be central to the plot,
    the group also allegedly planned the assassination of the chief of
    the Turkish general staff. But it was Turkish minorities that are
    said to have suffered most. Posing as radical Islamists, the group
    was said to have carried out the murders of prominent Christians,
    including the ethnic Armenian writer Hrant Dink, a Roman Catholic
    priest and a group of missionaries.

    The prosecution also alleges the suspects planned to kill the prime
    minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Nobel literature laureate Orhan
    Pamuk and prominent Kurdish politicians.

    Human rights campaigners welcomed the trial as an opportunity to expose
    the powerful position of groups with military links and strengthen
    the country's democracy, which has been interrupted by four coups
    since the country was established.

    "This case gives Turkey a chance to make clear that it will hold
    security forces accountable for abuse," said Benjamin Ward of Human
    Rights Watch.

    "But that can only happen if the investigation follows the evidence
    wherever and to whomever it leads."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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