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  • ANKARA: Testimony: Umraniye Bombs Were Ergenekon's

    TESTIMONY: UMRANIYE BOMBS WERE ERGENEKON'S

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 14 2008
    Turkey

    One of the defendants in the court case against Ergenekon, a criminal
    network accused of plotting to overthrow the government, testified
    yesterday that hand grenades discovered in the summer of 2007 inside
    a house in İstanbul's Umraniye district belong to Oktay Yıldırım,
    a retired noncommissioned army officer currently under arrest in
    relation to the case.

    The 13th hearing in the Ergenekon trial was held yesterday, with
    defendants continuing to give their statements. Ali Yigit, one of the
    suspects who was previously released from jail pending the outcome
    of the trial, claimed that hand grenades found in the Umraniye home
    -- the discovery that began the Ergenekon investigation -- belonged
    to Yıldırım. Yigit said he was being constantly threatened in an
    attempt to pressure him to not testify that the explosives belonged
    to the retired army officer.

    "Starting from the moment that I said that the hand grenades belonged
    to Yıldırım, I have been subjected to pressure to change my
    testimony. I was even warned that my one-and-a-half-year-old son
    would be killed if I didn't change my testimony," Yigit said.

    Yıldırım, however, denied possession of the explosives in his
    defense statement on Tuesday. "Neither my lawyer nor I saw those hand
    grenades [in the Umraniye house]. The court that ruled that they be
    detonated did not see them, either," he argued.

    The ammunition found in Umraniye was destroyed in accordance with a
    court order. He said the allegations against him were political and
    groundless. "I am proud to be here," he said. Yıldırım also denied
    any previous relationship with Yigit.

    Yigit, however, denied Yıldırım's claims and said he first
    met him while Yıldırım and Mahmut Ozturk, another retired
    noncommissioned officer who was arrested last June as part of the
    Ergenekon investigation, were shopping at the grocery store he ran
    with his uncle, Mehmet DemirtaÅ~_.

    "My father and I discovered a box of hand grenades in the attic
    of my uncle's house. When I asked about these explosives, my uncle
    said they belonged to Yıldırım. He warned me to guard them very
    carefully. I didn't see Yıldırım for two or three months after I
    discovered the hand grenades," he explained.

    Yigit also said he had been threatened multiple times by the lawyers
    representing Ozturk and Muzaffer Tekin, a retired captain currently
    under arrest. "Their lawyers told me several times that their clients
    were arrested because of this testimony. They warned me to change my
    testimony," he added.

    The Ä°stanbul 13th High Criminal Court is hearing the case in a
    makeshift courtroom inside Silivri Prison near Ä°stanbul. Among the
    86 suspects are retired Gen. Veli Kucuk and lawyer Kemal Kerincsiz,
    who is known for filing lawsuits against intellectuals over writings
    that question or criticize the state line on issues such as Armenian
    allegations of genocide. Forty-six of the suspects are in custody,
    and the rest have been released pending the outcome of the trial.

    The existence of Ergenekon has long been suspected, but the current
    investigation into the group began only in 2007, when a house in
    Ä°stanbul's Umraniye district that was being used as an arms depot
    was discovered by police.

    The Ergenekon indictment, made public in July, claims that the
    Ergenekon network is behind a series of political assassinations
    carried out over the past two decades for the ultimate purpose of
    triggering a military coup and taking over the government. The victims
    include secularist journalist Ugur Mumcu, long believed to have been
    assassinated by Islamic extremists in 1993; the head of a business
    conglomerate, Ozdemir 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; and secularist academic Necip
    Hablemitoglu, who was also believed to have been killed by Islamic
    extremists in 2002.

    Suspects face various charges, including "membership in an armed
    terrorist group," "attempting to destroy the government," "inciting
    people to rebel against the Republic of Turkey" and other similar
    crimes.

    JÄ°TEM and Ergenekon trials may be merged

    Meanwhile, another court case being heard in the Diyarbakır 3rd High
    Criminal Court may be merged with the Ergenekon case.

    The Diyarbakır court is hearing a trial of 11 suspects accused of
    being members of a clandestine and illegal intelligence agency within
    the gendermarie known as JÄ°TEM. In a hearing on Tuesday, co-plaintiff
    lawyers in the case demanded that the JÄ°TEM trial be merged with
    the Ergenekon trial. The presiding judge is still reviewing the appeal.

    --Boundary_(ID_sLKABX2D5dHd/lXzeLi9dA)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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