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From: Alamaine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Sent: Sun, 4 May 2008 7:57 am
Subject: [ctrl] Mystery of a killer elite fuels unrest in Turkey | World news | 
The Observer










http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/may/04/turkey.thefarright/print


Mystery of a killer elite fuels unrest in Turkey

Arrest of 47 people over alleged coup plot sparks fears of hidden  
ultra-right network
Jason Burke in Istanbul
The Observer, Sunday May 4 2008

Supporters wave flags for Devlet Bahceli in Istanbul, Turkey. Photograph:  
Carsten Koall/AFP/Getty Images



It has the elements of a thriller: a shadowy group of right-wing former  
soldiers, a mafia don, extremist lawyers and politicians; hand-grenades in  
a rucksack; plots to kill the Prime Minister and a Nobel-prize winning  
writer; allegedly planted evidence and falsified wire taps.

Even the name of the villains - the Ergenekon network - has an airport  
paperback flavour, and the stakes involved are high: the stability of one  
of the world's most strategically important countries. This highly charged  
political reality is splitting Turkey.

In the coming days the Ergenekon investigation will reach its climax.  
According to newspaper reports, a long-awaited indictment will be issued  
by the state prosecutor. After successive waves of arrests, 47 people are  
in custody. They include senior figures in the ultra-right-wing Workers'  
Party, a dozen retired senior army officers, journalists and a lawyer  
accused of launching legal attacks that drove Nobel award-winning writer  
Orhan Pamuk from his homeland.

Crimes being blamed on Ergenekon include a series of murderous bomb  
blasts, a grenade attack on a newspaper, the murder of an Italian bishop  
and the killing last year of Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink - all  
aimed, investigators believe, at creating a climate of terror and chaos  
propitious to a military coup that would depose Turkey's moderate Islamist  
government.

The coup attempt has revealed deep divisions in Turkey's 73 million-strong  
population over the country's identity: pro-European or anti-European,  
fiercely nationalist, ethnically homogeneous and militaristic, or  
globalised and pro-Western, more or less Islamic, more or less sunk in  
historical bitterness and dark conspiracy theories.

'The cleavage is deep: every institution, every social class, everybody is  
divided,' said Professor Murat Belge of Bigli University, Istanbul, an  
analyst. 'I am deeply apprehensive about what is going on now and what  
might happen.'

But for Mehmet Demirlek, a lawyer defending a colleague accused of being a  
key member of Ergenekon, the allegations are 'imaginary'. 'There is not a  
shred of truth in them,' he said. 'This is 100 per cent political. It has  
all been cooked up by the government and by the imperialist powers, the  
CIA, Mossad and the Jewish lobby and the European Union to eliminate  
Turkish nationalism. There is no such thing as Ergenekon.' His imprisoned  
client, Kemal Kerincsiz, told The Observer in an interview prior to his  
arrest he was a 'patriot fighting the disintegration of the nation'.

For Fethiye Cetin, a lawyer representing Hrant Dink's family, Ergenekon  
has 'existed for years'. 'A small part of what has been previously hidden  
is being exposed. Call it the "deep state".'

An investigation was launched by state prosecutors after 27 hand-grenades,  
said to be the make used by the military, were found in a home in a  
rundown part of Istanbul last June. Investigators claim that they later  
uncovered an underground network dedicated to extremist nationalist  
agitation.

Wire taps led to further finds of explosives, weapons and documents  
listing security arrangements of senior political and military figures and  
death lists. The papers supposedly proving Ergenekon - the name of a  
mythic mountain in Asia where the ancestors of the Turkic peoples escaped  
the Mongols - was set up in 1999 as a clandestine and violent organisation  
aimed of maintaining a reactionary, purist vision of a strong,  
militaristic Turkey, the heritage, the extremists believed, of the founder  
of the nation, Kemal Ataturk.

The plotters tap 'into a psyche that is based on a new and extreme  
nationalism', said Cengiz Candar, one of Turkey's most prominent  
journalists. 'The idea is that to preserve Turkey it is necessary and  
legitimate to resist in any way. And anyone who is pro-European, liberal,  
who argues for increased rights for minorities and so on is a traitor.'

According to Candar, this new nationalism is the result of a coincidence  
of factors: the difficulties of Turkey's accession to the European Union,  
soul-searching over nation identity generated by the debate on Europe, the  
emergence of a strong, semi-autonomous Kurdish state in post-Saddam Iraq  
with all the potential implications that has for Turkey's large Kurdish  
population, and, perhaps most importantly, the continuing electoral  
success of the AKP, the Justice and Development party, the moderate  
Islamist party led by Recep Tayyip Erdogan to power in 2002. 'With no way  
of ousting them through democratic means, other means become attractive to  
the extremist nationalists. This country has a long tradition of such  
actions,' said Candar.

Turkey's political history has been marked by interventions by the army,  
each preceded by a period of violent instability and each justified by the  
need to preserve the constitution and the nation. The repeated electoral  
success of the AKP, its social and economic policies, its pro-European,  
pro-free market stance, the growth of newly wealthy, religiously  
conservative middle classes who vote for Erdogan and his colleagues and  
the party's break with Turkey's fiercely secular ideology - all threaten  
the nation's powerful military and bureaucratic establishment.

A legal bid to ban the party - on the grounds that it wants to impose  
Sharia law on Turkey and thus overturn the constitution - is one tactic,  
AKP party loyalists say. Violence and the activities of Ergenekon is  
another. 'How long are these people going to keep their power when it is  
incompatible with a European, fully democratic Turkey?' asked Belge. 'And  
how big is Ergenekon? Who are they? How high does it go?'

No official military spokesman would comment but General Haldu Somazturk,  
who retired three years ago, told The Observer 'the Ergenekon group is  
trivial, barely worthy of attention', saying that though 'it was possible'  
a few military officers might have become involved in the group, the vast  
majority of Turkish soldiers were 'committed to maintaining democracy'.

Somazturk, who said that his own views 'reflected those of most senior  
soldiers', insisted 'there are far more grave problems facing Turkey than  
a handful of right-wing crazies'. Instead, he said, it was the government  
that worried him. 'The AKP are a concern. There is no such thing as  
moderate Islam. Either a government is influenced by religion or it isn't.  
And if it is, then it is not secular and not democratic,' he said. 'We  
want to move democracy forward, they want to move it back and we are  
approaching a point of no return.'

In a rundown working-class suburb of Istanbul, far from the tourist sights  
of the historic centre, the deputy chairman of the Nationalist Action  
Party in the city, Nazmi Celenk, made an effort to show his party's  
moderate side. 'In Turkey we are on the front line of the clash of  
civilisations,' he said. 'We are the natural allies of America and Britain  
in this region. Our future is in Europe - but not necessarily in the  
European Union.'

Yet Celenk was critical of last week's reform of Turkey's strict rules on  
'insulting Turkishness', pushed through parliament in the face of fierce  
resistance from the 70 deputies from his own party. If he was in power,  
Celenk said, the tight laws on freedom of expression would be maintained.  
And, if he had the power, he would invade Syria and split the state  
between Turkey and Iraq. The violent Kurdish activism in the south-east of  
his country would be solved 'in 24 hours'.

A street away, a group of mechanics and local shopkeepers played  
backgammon. They said they were worried by rising crime, drug use and low  
wages, but would not vote for the nationalists. 'They try and cause fights  
between us to get votes,' Hikmet, a bus owner, said.

Fethiye Cetin, the Dink family lawyer, is still optimistic despite the  
tensions. She discovered her own minority roots - an Armenian grandmother  
- at the age of 25. 'This period is the peak of aggressive nationalism in  
Turkey, but there is still peace,' she said in her small office on a hill  
above the blue waters of the Sea of Marmara. 'But everyone always focuses  
on the negative side and never on the tens of millions who live together  
without any trouble at all.'
Victim of the plot?

Hrant Dink was a 52-year-old journalist, assassinated in January 2007. As  
co-founder of Agos, a newspaper published in both Turkish and Armenian, he  
became a prominent member of the Armenian minority in Turkey and pushed  
for Turkish-Armenian reconciliation and human rights.

Dink was shot in Istanbul by Ogün Samast, a 17-year old Turkish  
nationalist. 100,000 mourners turned out to Dink's funeral to chant: 'We  
are all Armenians'.
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2008

-- 
Alamaine, IVe
Grand Forks, ND, US of A
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
"All are lunatics, but he who can analyze his delusion is called a
philosopher." - Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914)

"Being ignorant is not such a shame as being unwilling to learn." -
Poor Richard's Almanack, 1758 (Benjamin Franklin)
~~~~~~~
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