Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Germany arrests members of DHKP-C terrorist group

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LONG criticized by Ankara for harboring members of terrorist groups it recognizes, Germany appears to be appeasing Turkey with new arrests. German police arrested three senior members of Revolution­ary People’s Liberation Party-Front (DHKP-C), authoritie­s said yesterday. DHKP-C is known for a string of bloody attacks in Turkey, including the murder of a prosecutor at an Istanbul courthouse on March 31, 2015.

The terrorist group’s alleged German chief Özgül E., and two other leading figures, were arrested following a lengthy investigat­ion, the Federal Prosecutor’s Office said in a statement.

Özgül E., who is also on Turkey’s list of most-wanted terrorists, was arrested on Monday in the southweste­rn city of Heidelberg, according to the prosecutor­s. She was suspected of organizing the terrorist group’s propaganda, recruitmen­t and funding activities across Germany, and is believed to have supplied fake passports to the members of the group. Serkan K., who had coordinate­d the terrorist group’s activities in northern Germany, was arrested in Hamburg on Tuesday. Prosecutor­s said a third senior member of the group, İhsan C., was arrested in the western city of Bochum on Wednesday. He was suspected of coordinati­ng DHKP-C’s activities in southern Germany, organizing propaganda activities, and providing fake ID documents and logistical support for the terrorist group.

Germany banned the DHKP-C in 2000, but the group is still active in the country, and has around 650 followers among the immigrant population, according to the domestic intelligen­ce agency BfV.

Besides Turkey, the US and the European Union list the DHKP-C as a terrorist organizati­on. Ankara has repeatedly urged its NATO ally Germany to stop tolerating terrorist groups, which use the country as a platform for their activities against Turkey. Germany has also been viewed as a haven for supporters of the PKK, also recognized as a terrorist group by the European country. In 2019, a senior member of the DHKP-C was sentenced to six years in prison in Germany.

The terrorist group is responsibl­e for a number of attacks in Turkey, including the assassinat­ion of business tycoon Özdemir Sabancı in 1996 and an attack on the U.S. Embassy in Ankara in 2013 which killed a security guard.

The group has become less active in the country in recent years but remains a major security threat. The DHKP-C, which operated under the name “Dev Sol” until 1994, claimed responsibi­lity for a series of high-profile murders, including the assassinat­ion of nationalis­t politician Gün Sazak and former Prime Minister Nihat Erim in 1980. The group also killed several Turkish intelligen­ce officers. In 1994, the DHKP-C was founded after Dev Sol splintered. The group’s terror activities remained relatively minor compared to the PKK, another terrorist group targeting Turkey.

The DHKP-C attempted to stage a bloody comeback in recent years by carrying out attacks against the police. In 2012, about 10 years after its last known lethal attack in Turkey, the DHKP-C conducted a suicide bombing at a police station in Istanbul, killing a police officer.

After February 2013 attack on the U.S. Embassy, it launched rocket attacks against the Ministry of Justice in Ankara and the headquarte­rs of the ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party) in March 2013. In September 2013, the DHKP-C claimed responsibi­lity for a rocket attack against the headquarte­rs of the Turkish police in the capital. No casualties were reported in the three attacks.

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