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ANKARA: `My blood froze,' says potential Ergenekon Terror victim

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  • ANKARA: `My blood froze,' says potential Ergenekon Terror victim

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 11 2009


    `My blood froze,' says potential Ergenekon Terror victim


    President of the Alevi BektaÅ?i Federation Ali Balkız,
    plans of whose assassination were unearthed by a police raid into
    suspects of the terrorist organization Ergenekon, a clandestine
    network charged with plotting to overthrow the government, has stated
    that his "blood froze" when he was shown the detailed documents seized
    by the police.
    In January a new wave of detentions in the Ergenekon investigation
    revealed that the group was planning to assassinate Alevi and Armenian
    community leaders, the prime minister and members of the Supreme Court
    of Appeals -- acts that would have dragged Turkey into chaos had they
    been carried out.

    The prosecutors, who made public the detention warrant, indicated that
    the police, who had been monitoring the suspects' phone conversations
    for months, had found evidence that Ergenekon was engaged in
    preparations for a number of assassinations. The group was plotting to
    kill prominent Alevi community leaders such as Balkız and
    Kazım Genç, as well as Sivas Armenian Community
    President Minas Durmaz Güler and a number of journalists.

    Balkız, who met with Ergenekon prosecutor Zekeriya Ã-z two
    weeks ago, spoke to a panel in the city of Alanya on Monday, saying he
    was shown "a photograph of my house, a blueprint of it, the names of
    nine people, one of whom would obtain explosives, and the bomb they
    devised. It made me think of the killings of [UÄ?ur] Mumcu and
    [Necip] HablemitoÄ?lu, also under shady circumstances."

    Cumhuriyet daily columnist Mumcu, a leading figure in investigative
    journalism, was killed by a remote-controlled bomb placed under his
    car on Jan. 24, 1993. Historian Necip HablemitoÄ?lu was shot
    dead in front of his house on Dec. 18, 2002. They were long believed
    to have been assassinated by Islamic extremists, until documents
    seized from various suspects suggested that Ergenekon was behind both
    of their deaths.

    Balkız said he was terrified when he was shown the "Ergenekon
    documents" about his planned assassination. Saying that the group's
    plans to pit Alevi and Sunni groups against each other in society
    would not work, Balkız added, "Turkey will not fall into that
    trap one more time."

    This is not the first time a potential victim or even a suspect has
    said they were shocked and terrified to see documents proving the
    atrocities committed and planned by the organization. Retired
    Gen. Erdal Å?enel, who was briefly detained last month, said in
    his police testimony that he was shocked by the scale of the Ergenekon
    organization.

    Å?enel said he discerned that Ergenekon was a terrorist
    organization from the questions asked in his police interrogation on
    Jan. 8.

    Also in February Erhan Göksel, the head of the Verse Poll
    Company who was also detained in the Ergenekon investigation but later
    released, stated that "75 percent of the accusations against Ergenekon
    are true."

    Göksel said he had seen the prosecutors' documents during his
    brief detentions. He said most of the allegations are true.



    11 March 2009, Wednesday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN Ä°STANBUL
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