http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticleNew.asp?xfile=data/theworld/2008/J
anuary/theworld_January655.xml
<http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticleNew.asp?xfile=data/theworld/2008/
January/theworld_January655.xml&section=theworld> &section=theworld
 
Turkish nationalists plotted to kill Nobel winner
(AFP)

23 January 2008 


ISTANBUL - Police believe Nobel laureate novelist Orhan Pamuk and Kurdish
politicians were on the hit list of an ultranationalist group whose alleged
members were detained this week, newspapers reported Wednesday.


Thirty-three people, including retired soldiers, journalists, nationalist
lawyers and underworld figures, are being interrogated in Istanbul,
prosecutors said in a statement.

They were detained Tuesday as part of a probe into the discovery of hand
grenades and bomb detonators in a house in Istanbul in June, the statement
said, without giving other details.

Police believe the suspects were planning to assassinate Pamuk, who won the
2006 Nobel literature prize, prominent journalist Fehmi Koru and Kurdish
politicians Leyla Zana, Osman Baydemir and Ahmet Turk, the daily Milliyet
reported.

Police are also investigating whether the suspects were involved in several
politically motivated attacks that shocked Turkey over the past two years,
the daily Sabah said.

They include the murders of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, Italian
Catholic priest Andrea Santoro and a senior judge killed by a gunman who
stormed into the country's top administrative court, the daily said.

Officials said the suspects include Kemal Kerincsiz, a lawyer notorious for
initiating legal action against Pamuk, Dink and other intellectuals for
disputing the official line on the World War I Ottoman era massacres of
Armenians.

Turkey fiercely rejects Armenian claims, backed by several Western
countries, that the killings were genocide.

Another prominent detainee is retired general Veli Kucuk, who has been
accused of organising extra-judicial killings of Kurds in the 1990s.

The suspects also include a retired colonel, a newspaper columnist, the
spokeswoman of the Turkish Orthodox Church and two prominent underworld
figures.

Sabah termed the detentions a blow against the 'deep state'-a term used here
to describe members of the security forces acting outside the law to
preserve what they consider Turkey's best interests, often employing the
services of the underworld.

Dink's family claims that the journalist's self-confessed teenage assassin
was incited by people who remain at large and enjoy the protection of some
members of the security forces.



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