The National - News

Turkey arrests former army chief

General Basbug suspected of plotting coup

- Thomas Seibert Foreign Correspond­ent

ISTANBUL // The former chief of the country’s armed forces was arrested yesterday after a court charged him with creating a terrorist organisati­on and an internet propaganda campaign to undermine the elected government. With the decision by the High Criminal Court in Istanbul, General Ilker Basbug, who served as Turkey’s chief of general staff from 2008 until his retirement in 2010, became the first military chief in the history of the republic to be detained by a civilian court.

After being questioned until late on Thursday, the general was detained shortly after midnight and driven to Silivri prison outside Istanbul.

Judge Vedat Dalda was quoted by Turkish media as saying that Gen Basbug, 68, was under “strong suspicion” of having establishe­d “an armed terror organisati­on” designed to overthrow the government. Gen Basbug’s lawyer said he would appeal against his client’s detention.

Opponents of Erdogan argue that the government is using special criminal courts to weaken the military

Analysts said the detention was a sign that the military’s political power was waning. Military leaders have pushed four government­s from office in the past 50 years and have long enjoyed final say on important matters of the state.

In 2007, the strictly secularist armed forces threatened to unseat the Islamist- rooted government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, but a subsequent landslide victory by Mr Erdogan in a general election dealt a heavy blow to the military’s plan. Last year, Mr Erdogan scored another political victory when he forced almost the entire general staff to resign.

“The fact that a former chief of general staff is being put on trial is extremely good for democracy in the country and a step forward,” Mehmet Ali Birand, a television host and newspaper columnist, said on Facebook yesterday. But Birand called on the government to shorten the long periods of detention typical in many high-profile court cases in Turkey.

Huseyin Tanriverdi, a deputy chairman of Mr Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party ( AKP), also welcomed the arrest of Gen Basbug. “The detention of Ilker Basbug is a sign of Turkey’s democratis­ation,” Mr Tanriverdi said, according to the Anatolia news agency.

Gen Basbug is accused of approving a document, dubbed the Internet Memorandum, in which he ordered the creation of websites to spread propaganda against the government. Since September, 22 suspects, including former highrankin­g military officers, have stood trial in connection with a total of 42 now-defunct websites, which spread propaganda against the government and minorities such as Greeks and Armenians.

The general staff in Ankara con- firmed that the websites were set up under its auspices, but blamed the anti-government propaganda on individual officers who violated orders. But several former officers on trial told the court the responsibi­lity lay with the military leadership. Some said Gen Basbug had approved the Internet Memorandum. Based on that testimony, prosecutor­s last week decided to question Gen Basbug.

Prosecutor­s have merged the Internet Memorandum case with another case against military officers accused of planning to destabilis­e the Erdogan government. According to the prosecutio­n, officers of the general staff produced an “Action Plan for the Combat against Islamist Extremism” in 2009, when Gen Basbug was chief of general staff. The trials are connected to a wide- ranging investigat­ion against suspected members of an organisati­on called Ergenekon, which prosecutor­s say included coup- plotters inside and outside the armed forces.

During his questionin­g on Thursday, Gen Basbug rejected the charges against him. “The commander of such an army facing charges of forming and leading an armed organisati­on is really tragicomic,” he told prosecutor­s, according to the Anatolia news agency. Opponents of Mr Erdogan argue that the government is using special criminal courts such as the one in Istanbul to weaken the military. A group of supporters of Gen Basbug gathered in front of the prison yesterday with Turkish flags to show their backing for the general, the Hurriyet newspaper reported in its online edition.

Kemal Kilicdarog­lu, the secularist opposition leader in Ankara, said the arrest of Gen Basbug showed the government was putting pressure on the military through the courts.

“I have said before that the specialise­d courts are not courts dispensing justice, but courts executing decisions made by the political authority,” Mr Kilicdarog­lu told reporters in Ankara. “I am still of that opinion.”

The government kept a low profile yesterday. Suat Kilic, the minister for youth and sports, told reporters it was perfectly normal for the government to refrain from comment, because Gen Basbug’s detention was a matter for the judiciary.

Abdullah Gul, the president, said Gen Basbug was presumed innocent until proven guilty. “Everybody is equal before the law,” the president said. Mr Gul’s ascent to the top job prompted a coup threat by the military in 2007.

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 ?? Umit Bektas / Reuters ?? General Ilker Basbug, the former chief of Turkey’s armed forces, attends a funeral in February 2010 with the prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan . Gen Basbug spent his first night behind bars yesterday.
Umit Bektas / Reuters General Ilker Basbug, the former chief of Turkey’s armed forces, attends a funeral in February 2010 with the prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan . Gen Basbug spent his first night behind bars yesterday.
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