Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Court says killer of Russian envoy was ‘secret FETÖ member’

- EDITOR YUSUF ZİYA DURMUŞ

verdict made public yesterday, a court in the capital Ankara reasoned that Mevlüt Mert Altıntaş, murderer of Russian Ambassador to Turkey Andrei Karlov, was “a secret member of FETÖ,” referring to the Gülenist Terror Group.

Altıntaş, an off-duty police officer, was killed in a shootout with police after he gunned down Karlov during an event in the capital on Dec. 19, 2016. In a trial on the murder that concluded in March, five people were sentenced to life. They included civilians who were accused of working as “handlers” of Altıntaş on behalf of the terrorist group.

The detailed verdict says the assassinat­ion was the work of terrorist group’s infiltrato­rs in the law enforcemen­t and National Intelligen­ce Organizati­on (MİT). Altıntaş was “hand-picked” by FETÖ and was secretly raised as a loyal member of the group.

The verdict also said that the assassinat­ion was part of a chain of events perpetrate­d by FETÖ, including a raid on Syrian-bound trucks of MİT and finally, the July 15, 2016 coup attempt, the work of the military infiltrato­rs of the terrorist group. “All these three have a common purpose: to overthrow the constituti­onal order in Turkey and replace it with another one. Spoiling Russian-Turkish relations was only one of the goals of the attack. Others were to boost the morale of members of FETÖ and pave the way for the coup attempt,” the verdict says. The terrorist group was facing increased scrutiny at the time of the attack and thousands of people were being interrogat­ed, detained or arrested.

The indictment against the defendants said that FETÖ tried to undermine Turkish-Russian relations and create a perception that Turkey was an unsafe place for diplomats. FETÖ originally instructed Altıntaş to shoot Karlov in June 2016 at the headquarte­rs of the ruling Justice and Developmen­t (AK Party) where the ambassador was scheduled to attend a dinner for foreign diplomats, the prosecutor said. Karlov was unable to attend the dinner that would take place one month before FETÖ’s coup attempt that killed 251 people. The prosecutor said the assassinat­ion attempt before the planned coup would be “a step to incite chaos in the country to pave the way for a takeover by putschists. It would also instigate a conflict between Turkey and Russia.”

FETÖ is known for its meticulous efforts to infiltrate everywhere, from the judiciary to law enforcemen­t and the military. For decades, it succeeded in planting its members without drawing much attention. Although it was known to authoritie­s that some civil servants, from judges to police chiefs, had ties to the group – which has long posed as a religious movement – the terrorist group also controlled a sizeable network of infiltrato­rs. The infiltrato­rs, disclosed thanks to countless investigat­ions since the 2016 coup attempt, had managed to hide their affiliatio­n with the group.

According to the verdict, the assassinat­ion was plotted by the group’s infiltrato­rs in intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t. Vehbi Kürşat Akalın, a former intelligen­ce officer sentenced to aggravated life imprisonme­nt, collected informatio­n about Karlov and handed it over to Hüseyin Kötüce, a senior member of FETÖ. Kötüce, also sentenced to life, conveyed the informatio­n to the terrorist group’s fugitive leader, Fetullah Gülen. Eventually, Gülen ordered the assassinat­ion and his subordinat­es relayed his orders to Altıntaş. Altıntaş, who was initially thought to be a sympathize­r of the terrorist group al-Nusra, was actually planted in a religious community by FETÖ, upon instructio­ns of Gülen to his followers, to avoid detection of his links to FETÖ. Altıntaş sought to join one such community to disguise his ties to the terrorist group, the verdict says.

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