http://rastibini. blogspot. com/2008/ 08/jitems- black-face. html

"Beginning on 14 January 1994, almost a hundred people were individually picked up by commandos wearing uniforms and travelling in police vehicles. They were then killed somewhere along the road
from Ankara to Istanbul, in the "satanic triangle" of Kocaeli, a fiefdom of the far-right mafia and a focal point for the trafficking of heroin into Europe." ~ Kendal Nezan.

What follows is not exactly news because it’s typical behavior of JITEM with which Kurds in Turkish-occupied Kurdistan have long been familiar. But this news did come out in a Turkish daily and,
according to the article, the information is contained in one of the Ergenekon files. This is the tip of the iceburg and shows that DTP politicians, such as Ahmet Türk and Emine Ayna are correct in their
calls for the Ergenekon investigation to be expanded to the east of the Fýrat (Euphrates).

This news is also at odds with the Bush regime’s recent attempt to blacken PKK with charges of drug-trafficking, especially since it’s widely known that the Ankara regime has long held a regional
monopoly on the processing of heroin, a fact which has been a recurring theme in the Sibel Edmonds case.

From Bugün:
http://www.bugun. com.tr/haber_ detay.asp? haberID=37615

Here is JITEM’s black face

An important document was found in the house of [Adnan] Akfýrat, who has been arrested in the Ergenekon case. In the document, activities of troops on duty on the border [in The Southeast] between 1981 to 1990, were outlined in detail.

In Ergenekon’s documents, which are noted as "The Writings of a Non-Commissioned Officer Who Wrote Additional Information for JITEM Files to Be Given to the Jandarma Headquarters Command", the duties that were carried out by the troops which were on duty between 1981 to 1990 in Þýrnak, Diyarbakýr, Van, and other border regions, including some soldiers ranked as field grade officers, were listed in detail.

This informant document about JITEM was found in Adnan Akfýrat’s house, who was the news manager of [Doðu] Perinçek’s magazine, published in the 1990s, called Toward 2000. According to the NCO who wrote the document, high-ranking soldiers conducted illegal drug-trafficking and arms sales with Village Guards in conflict areas like Diyarbakýr, Van, and Þýrnak.

Narcotic and human trafficking

In the informant document, it is mentioned that the soldiers and Village Guards who smuggled weapons and tons of narcotics to Iraq earned huge sums of money. Human trafficking, the weapons and narcotics trade, and the rape of refugee women are some of the crimes committed by JITEM personnel. Despite being caught, they [JITEM personnel, soldiers, and Village Guards involved in this
business] were protected by MÝT.

They sold weapons to PKK

The informant document, which is in the Ergenekon indictment’s 208th evidence file, mentions that Major Kamber O, Lieutenant Colonel Reþit D, Major Ýsmail A, First Lieutenan Cihan B, First Lieutenant Kemal Þ, Sergeant Ibrahim K, Diyarbakýr JITEM Group Commander Major Nurettin, established a group which included also Village Guards, and conducted human and narcotics trafficking, and weapons smuggling.

150,000 weapons collected

The claims in the informant document are terrifying:

First Lieutenant Cihan B was the commander of the 4th Border Company in Ortabað, which was under the command of the Þenoba Border Battalion. Some Village Guards were among his men. From time to time, he sent these men to Iraq to buy TVs, videos, tapes, electronic games, and electronic devices. He sold these in Diyarbakýr’s Japan Bazaar. During the Gulf War, he assisted Iraqi refugees in crossing the border into Turkey, for a price. There were approximately 300,000 refugees. He collected around 150,000 weapons.

Sergeant Ibrahim K shared money and gems that he collected from the refugees, with the battalion commander. He forced refugee women to have sexual relations.

 

Now I know you noticed the sub-headline mentioning the sales of weapons to PKK, but there was no other mention of PKK in the entire article. If there were sales of weapons to PKK outlined in the
informant document of the Ergenekon file, there would have been more information about that included in the Bugün article. Instead, what we have in the sub-headline is nothing more than gratuitous crap.

Most of the information here is pretty mild compared to the horrors that were visited upon the Kurdish population from 1990 onward. Those years must also be investigated and the information published
in every Turkish daily.

 

F
E
E
D

B
A
C
K