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ANKARA: Susurluk's Catli Was Killed By Ergenekon, New Witness Claims

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  • ANKARA: Susurluk's Catli Was Killed By Ergenekon, New Witness Claims

    SUSURLUK'S CATLI WAS KILLED BY ERGENEKON, NEW WITNESS CLAIMS

    Today's Zaman
    April 29 2009
    Turkey

    The main figure in a scandalous 1996 car crash that for the first
    time brought evidence to light showing links between the state and
    illegal formations was killed by Ergenekon, a clandestine terrorist
    organization charged with plotting to overthrow the government,
    and not in the crash, according to new evidence made public on
    Monday. Dossiers of evidence from the second indictment in the trial
    of suspected members of Ergenekon were handed to defense attorneys
    on Monday evening.

    According to a witness whose testimony is included in the new dossiers,
    Abdullah Catlı, an ultranationalist criminal who was thought to have
    died in the 1996 Susurluk car crash, which exposed links between the
    Turkish state, the criminal underworld and Turkish security forces,
    was killed by Ergenekon. The Susurluk incident revealed that Catlı, a
    leader of the ultranationalist Grey Wolves group, worked for the state.

    Huseyin Kocadag, a former police chief; Sedat Bucak, a southeastern
    tribal leader whose men were armed by the state to fight separatist
    violence; and Catlı, an internationally wanted mafia boss, were
    involved in an accident near the small township of Susurluk while
    riding in the same car. Kocadag, Catlı and his girlfriend, a former
    model, were allegedly killed in the accident. No arrests of major
    figures were made as a result of the ensuing investigation, which
    had actually exposed, for the first time in modern Turkish history,
    a gang with links to the state. Retired Brig. Gen. Veli Kucuk, who
    is currently in jail as an Ergenekon suspect, was detained but later
    released during the Susurluk investigation.

    The dossiers contain the testimony of a secret witness, referred to
    as Kıskac (Pincer), who told the prosecution on Nov. 30, 2008, that a
    senior gendarmerie master sergeant he identified as Hakan, who worked
    for JÄ°TEM -- an illegal organization founded inside the gendarmerie
    accused of hundreds of atrocities against civilians in the Southeast
    -- revealed to him that Catlı had not died in the accident. Kıskac
    said Hakan had told him: "Abdullah Catlı's arm was broken in the
    accident. We killed him by bludgeoning him to death." JÄ°TEM is
    believed to be the most important armed branch of Ergenekon.

    Kıskac, who asked Hakan why Bucak had not been killed by JİTEM's men,
    received the reply: "This man has 14,000 armed men; he has control over
    a route from Antep to Silopi. We don't want to lose this route." Hakan
    also said the accident had been arranged by JÄ°TEM and that Osman
    Gurbuz, another Ergenekon suspect, had followed the Mercedes Catlı
    and the others were in.

    "They told me to work for them. They said they'd guarantee me
    immunity. JÄ°TEM was a unit established to fight terrorism, but they
    are dealing with every kind of business but terrorism, including
    extortion and assassinations," Kıskac told the prosecution.

    There are 248 dossiers containing evidence backing up the allegations
    brought by the prosecution against the suspects in the Ergenekon
    trial. The new documents reveal that retired Gen. Å~^ener Eruygur,
    who was arrested but then released pending trial after suffering a
    severe fall and sustaining cerebral injuries, ordered his assistants
    to clean up any incriminating documents that might be found in
    his office during police raids. The dossiers include transcripts
    of a phone conversation between Eruygur and a woman named Nermin,
    apparently Eruygur's secretary. In response to the woman's questions
    regarding certain documents, Eruygur says: "Tear them apart; throw
    them away." The dossiers reveal that Eruygur hid a large number of
    confidential documents crucial to the organization's coup plots in
    his office.

    Allegations put forward by a newsweekly accusing former military
    commanders of plotting a coup d'état have also made their way into
    the second indictment of the Ergenekon trial. The allegations leveled
    in the summer of 2007 by the Nokta newsweekly -- which claimed that in
    2004 now-retired Adm. Ozden Ornek and the four force commanders at the
    time had made plans to stage military coups to be named AyıÅ~_ıgı
    (M oonlight) and Sarıkız (Blonde Girl) -- will be brought before
    a court for the first time. The new dossiers include excerpts from
    Ornek's diary as well as personal notes of Ergenekon suspect and
    Cumhuriyet daily columnist Mustafa Balbay. Gen. Eruygur is accused of
    being the mastermind behind Moonlight and Blonde Girl, as well as two
    other coup plans the group called Yakamoz (Sea Sparkle) and Eldiven
    (Glove).

    The documents also reveal that the group gathered intelligence and
    compiled lists of information about Justice and Development Party (AK
    Party) politicians. In these lists, some AK Party members are tagged
    with labels such as "Kurdish-Arab hybrid" and "Kurdish rebel Sheik
    Said's grandson." Next to one of these figures, a statement reads,
    "He is a leader in the mobilization of Kurdish population movements."

    The organization also compiled detailed information on the politicians
    closest to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, including Mucahid
    Arslan, Huseyin Besli, Cuneyt Zapsu, Egemen BagıÅ~_ and Omer Celik. In
    addition to biographies and detailed information on these politicians,
    Eruygur's team also categorized AK Party politicians into two groups --
    supporters of Erdogan and supporters of Abdullah Gul.

    The new dossiers also include evidence that generals planned to ban
    civilian political activity for at least two decades.

    The second indictment accuses Eruygur of "establishing or leading
    an armed terrorist organization, recording private information of
    various individuals illegally, attempting to overthrow the government,
    influencing the judiciary, inciting people to armed revolt and
    attempting to destroy the Turkish Parliament." The prosecution demands
    three consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole
    and an additional 142 to 246 years in jail without the possibility
    of parole.

    Other evidence included in the dossiers reveals that the generals'
    coup-plotting group within the military, named the Republican Work
    Group (CCG), actively supported Turkish Cypriot politician Rauf
    DenktaÅ~_.

    Dink murder suspect and Dalan The dossiers also include concrete
    evidence showing that Professor Ercument Ovalı, who was arrested last
    year on suspicion of possible links to the murder of Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink in 2007, had frequent meetings with fugitive
    Ergenekon suspect and former Ä°stanbul Mayor Bedrettin Dalan. This
    information was obtained from a phone conversation between Ergenekon
    suspect Kemal Aydın and Ovalı.

    'I found Eruygur collapsed on the floor' Retired Gen. Eruygur
    suffered a cerebral hemorrhage on Sept. 17, 2008, at Kandıra Prison,
    where he was jailed at the time. The new documents also include
    Ergenekon suspect and retired Gen. HurÅ~_it Tolon's testimony to the
    prosecution about Eruygur's fall in prison, in which he sustained
    a head injury. In his testimony, Tolon is quoted as saying: "In the
    morning, I opened my eyes to a loud noise. I heard a noise between
    a snore and a grumble. The grumbling wasn't too far away. I got up,
    thinking I had fallen asleep in the wrong place. When I reached the
    stairs, I saw that he was lying on his back right at the spot where
    the stairs turned 90 degrees to the right, with his legs open like a
    V. I could see that he was breathing. I ran down the stairs. I tried
    to get him up, but he didn't come to. I started banging on the door
    so a security officer would come. One came within a minute or two."
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