51 Turkse officieren opgepakt wegens voorbereiding coup

Gestart door VandeWiel, 24/02/2010 | 18:23 uur

VandeWiel

Citaat van: Elzenga op 24/02/2010 | 22:16 uur
Citaat van: VandeWiel op 24/02/2010 | 18:25 uur
Voorbereiding coupe bij een Navo partner. Ik ben benieuwd of dit onderdeel uitmaakt van Erdogans pogingen om het leger meer buiten spel te zetten.
Ik ben benieuwd hoe de rest van het leger hier op gaat reageren.....Het zijn immers niet de minste die verhoord zijn...

Ik ook. Blijkbaar voelt Erdogan zich sterk genoeg en durft hij het aan.

Lex

Turkse legerofficieren vastgezet

Zeven hoge Turkse legerofficieren, onder wie een generaal, zijn aangeklaagd voor betrokkenheid bij een couppoging. Ze werden maandag samen met zo'n 40 andere militairen opgepakt.

De militairen worden ervan verdacht enkele jaren geleden coupplannen te hebben gesmeed. Ze zouden met aanslagen een chaos hebben willen creëren, zodat het leger de islamitisch georienteerde regering van premier Erdogan kon afzetten.

In Turkije geldt het leger van oudsher als de hoeder van de seculiere staat. Premier Erdogan probeert de macht van het leger in te perken. Morgen bespreken president Gül, premier Erdogan en de opperbevelhebber van het leger de kwestie.

NOS.nl, Update: woensdag 24 feb 2010, 19:49

Elzenga

Citaat van: VandeWiel op 24/02/2010 | 18:25 uur
Voorbereiding coupe bij een Navo partner. Ik ben benieuwd of dit onderdeel uitmaakt van Erdogans pogingen om het leger meer buiten spel te zetten.
Ik ben benieuwd hoe de rest van het leger hier op gaat reageren.....Het zijn immers niet de minste die verhoord zijn...

VandeWiel

Voorbereiding coupe bij een Navo partner. Ik ben benieuwd of dit onderdeel uitmaakt van Erdogans pogingen om het leger meer buiten spel te zetten.

VandeWiel

Prosecutors interrogate 51 Turkish officers

ANKARA, Turkey — Prosecutors on Tuesday interrogated 51 Turkish military commanders, including former Air Force and Navy chiefs, over alleged plans to destabilize the country by blowing up mosques to trigger a coup and topple the Islamic-rooted government.

It was the highest profile crackdown ever on the Turkish military, which has ousted four governments since 1960. For decades Turkey's senior officers, self-appointed guardians of the country's secular tradition, called the shots.

But the balance of power in this EU-candidate country appeared to have shifted Monday as police rounded up the 51 military commanders, following the gathering of wiretap evidence and discovery of an alleged secret coup plan, dubbed "the sledgehammer."

The nationwide sweep has dramatically deepened a power struggle between the secular establishment and the government, which has strong electoral backing and the European Union's support. Turkey's elite military — known as "pashas," a title of respect harking back to Ottoman times — were once deemed untouchable.

"The most heavy sledgehammer to military custody," read banner headline of daily Taraf, which has published leaked military documents that lead to the detentions.

The English-language newspaper Today's Zaman said Tuesday that the operation was launched after experts determined the leaked documents were authentic. The government denies the ongoing crackdown is politically motivated or designed to silence government critics, as is claimed by opposition parties.

The suspects included former Air Force chief Gen. Ibrahim Firtina and Navy Chief Adm. Ozden Ornek, who allegedly chronicled some failed coup attempts, as well ex-deputy chief Gen. Ergin Saygun — who had accompanied Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan during his 2007 meeting with former President George W. Bush in Washington.

Also detained were the former head of the Special Forces, Gen. Engin Alan, and the former head of the 1st Army, Gen. Cetin Dogan.

All of the suspects, including nearly two dozen retired and active duty generals and admirals, were expected after questioning to appear Tuesday in an Istanbul court that is hearing all coup plot allegations.

The suspects face charges of attempting to topple the government by force, and membership in an illegal organization for that purpose, daily Milliyet said Tuesday.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the government is preparing to overhaul the judiciary and the Constitution, a legacy of the 1980 military coup and could even take the issue to a "referendum."

"A new constitution would make it easier for us to enter the EU," said Burhan Kuzu, head of a parliamentary commission in charge of constitutional amendments, at a conference Monday in central Anatolian city of Corum.

http://www.ajc.com/news/nation-world/prosecutors-interrogate-51prosecutors-interrogate-51-turkish-321143.html