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2 Turkish retired generals charged: "forming an armed terror group"

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  • 2 Turkish retired generals charged: "forming an armed terror group"

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    Two Turkish retired generals charged with "forming and organizing an
    armed terror group"
    29.03.2009 00:53 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ An Istanbul court has formally indicted 56 suspects,
    including two retired generals, on charges of plotting to topple
    Turkey's Islamic-rooted government.

    The indictment is the second to emerge from a massive investigation
    into a secularist group that has stirred controversy since the
    investigation began in June 2007.

    Charged last July with stirring up civil unrest to encourage military
    intervention, 86 suspects are already being tried in a court near
    Istanbul.

    This week's charge sheet names the men prosecutors appear to think
    organized the plot: Sener Eruygur, a former military police chief, and
    Hursit Tolon, a former military commander. Both men, who are the
    highest-ranking military officers to be arrested in Turkey's 62-year
    history of multi-party democracy, say they are innocent.

    The pair are both charged with "forming and organizing an armed terror
    group" and "attempting to remove the government".

    Mr Eruygur is also charged in connection with the May 2006 murder of a
    high court judge which triggered the secular backlash against the
    ruling AK Party that ended in military threats of intervention in
    April 2007. The extent of both men's opposition to AK Party rule
    became clear in 2007, when a Turkish magazine published extracts from
    diaries allegedly written by an admiral detailing their role in two
    failed coup attempts in 2004. Now retired, the admiral continues to
    deny he wrote the diary.

    Among the suspects charged were two prominent journalists ?â??
    Mustafa Balbay, who is the chief journalist in Ankara for Cumhuriyet,
    a secular newspaper, and Tuncay Ozkan, former owner of the secular
    KanalTurk television. Several former police officials, politicians and
    academics were also charged, The Independent reports.
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