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  • ANKARA: Police detain retired colonel linked to Malatya murders

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 13 2009


    Police detain retired colonel linked to Malatya murders


    A retired colonel being sought on an arrest warrant issued as part of
    an investigation into Ergenekon, a clandestine terrorist organization
    charged with plotting to overthrow the government, was detained in
    Ankara yesterday by squads from the Ankara Police Department.

    Investigators believe the retired colonel, identified as Mehmet
    Ã`lger, might solidify the suspected link between Ergenekon and the
    murders of three Christians at a publishing house in Malatya in
    2007. It has been reported that Ã`lger previously served as the
    Malatya Provincial Gendarmerie Battalion commander. He was lined up to
    testify in court as a witness in the murder of three Christians in
    Malatya, sources said. Zekeriya Ã-z, the chief prosecutor in the
    Ergenekon investigation, is planning to investigate suspected links
    between the Malatya murders and Ergenekon. Reports said Ã`lger's
    name was mentioned in a letter written by an informant to the court
    conducting the Malatya investigation.

    Sources said the police had been monitoring the retired colonel's
    phone conversations as part of the Ergenekon investigation for some
    time. Ã`lger was detained as a result of potentially incriminating
    statements he made during phone conversations with several Ergenekon
    suspects and because of information provided by Dicle University
    instructor Abdurrahim DoÄ?ru, who was detained earlier in the
    investigation on charges of financing Ergenekon. Ã`lger, who was
    detained yesterday in the capital, was transferred to Ä°stanbul
    for interrogation by police and will later testify to a court.

    Meanwhile, a noncommissioned officer on active duty at the
    Intelligence Department of the Diyarbakır Gendarmerie Battalion
    Command was detained yesterday. The noncommissioned officer, a special
    sergeant identified as Mehmet Ã?olak, was also transferred to
    Ä°stanbul yesterday. Ã?olak frequently met with Ruhi Abat,
    a theology professor who allegedly incited the Malatya murders.

    The co-plaintiff lawyers in the Malatya case requested in January that
    Ergün Poyraz, one of the suspects arrested in 2007 as part of
    the investigation into Ergenekon, testify in court as a witness in the
    Malatya murder case.

    Ergenekon-Malatya link

    Recent evidence collected in the Ergenekon investigation has
    consistently suggested that the brutal Malatya killings might have
    been organized by Ergenekon, which is suspected of a large number of
    murders and bombings aimed at creating chaos in the country to serve
    the organization's ultimate purpose of overthrowing the
    government. Lawyers representing the families of the victims have been
    calling for a deeper investigation into Ergenekon ties since the start
    of the investigation.

    During a hearing of the Malatya case held in February at the Malatya
    3rd High Criminal Court, the presiding judge announced that the
    Ä°stanbul 13th High Criminal Court, which is trying the
    Ergenekon case, had sent his court a copy of the Ergenekon indictment
    in response to the Malatya court's query into the possibility of
    merging the two cases. The judge also said the Ergenekon indictment
    had as of that day been merged with the Christian murders case.

    Ergenekon is suspected not only in the Malatya murder case, but also
    in various other attacks and assassinations, including the killing of
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in early 2007.

    On April 18, 2007, Necati Aydın (35), UÄ?ur Yüksel
    and German national Tilmann Ekkehart Geske (46) were tied to their
    chairs, tortured and stabbed at the Zirve publishing house in the
    eastern Anatolian city of Malatya before their throats were slit. The
    publishing house they worked for published Bibles and Christian
    literature. Suspects S.G., C.Ã-., H.T. and A.Y., whose full names
    were not disclosed because of their ages, were caught at the crime
    scene and immediately taken into custody. The main suspect, Emre
    Günaydın, jumped from a third-story window while
    attempting to escape from police and was taken into custody after
    being hospitalized.


    13 March 2009, Friday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN Ä°STANBUL
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