Friday, January 22, 2010

Turkey Tries To Purge Itself of Al Qaeda, 120 Arrested Across The Country


Apparently the government and security forces of Turkey saw the writing on the wall and decided now was the best time to finally confront the al Qaeda infiltrators in that country, so today they arrested 120 al Qaeda jihadis from all corners of the country, including some pretty high leaders.

From the article at the BBC:


Turkish police have arrested 120 al-Qaeda suspects in a major nationwide anti-terror operation, reports say.
The arrests were made in co-ordinated pre-dawn raids in 16 provinces, said the state-run Anatolia news agency.

It added the raids came after police seized documents disclosing details of extremist militant activity in Turkey.

Reports suggest those detained may have been involved in plots to kill Turkish soldiers serving in Afghanistan or police in Turkey.
I've mentioned it here before that Turkey is facing some serious challenges by islamic fundamentalists seeking to destroy Turkey's secular government and install a similar Islamic version such as that in Iran. And with al Qaeda lousy throughout the country, the recipe has been there for some pretty serious chaos. The one good thing for Turkey is a military and security forces that don't normally screw around - I doubt this will be the last series of raids, especially once these al Qaeda start singing like they always do.


Turkey police arrest 120 al-Qaeda suspects

Turkish police have arrested 120 al-Qaeda suspects in a major nationwide anti-terror operation, reports say.
The arrests were made in co-ordinated pre-dawn raids in 16 provinces, said the state-run Anatolia news agency.
Those detained include an alleged militant recruiter who worked at a university in the eastern city of Van, Anatolia quoted police as saying.
It added the raids came after police seized documents disclosing details of extremist militant activity in Turkey.
Friday morning's raids netted weapons, fake identity cards and camouflage clothing, unnamed police officials said.
Suspected leaders of al-Qaeda cells in Turkey - including the local group's leader, Serdar Elbasi - were reportedly among those detained.
Afghanistan link
The raids, which took place in cities including Ankara and Istanbul, came after 33 suspected al-Qaeda members were arrested in Ankara and Adana earlier this week.

Reports suggest those detained may have been involved in plots to kill Turkish soldiers serving in Afghanistan or police in Turkey.
Turkish police occasionally carry out such raids against other Islamist groups and suspected Kurdish militants.
Al-Qaeda has been held responsible for sporadic attacks in Turkey, such as multiple suicide bombings against the British Consulate, a branch of HSBC and two synagogues in Istanbul in 2003.
Sixty-three people died, including British Consul-General Roger Short. Seven people, including one Syrian citizen, were jailed in 2007 over the attacks.
Although Turkey is governed by a notionally Islamist party, the AKP, it takes a tough stand against all forms of terrorism.
There are pockets of sympathy for jihadist Islam in parts of Turkey - numbering around 5,000 Salafi Muslims in total - but these pockets are small.
Turkey is a member of Nato and a long-standing US ally, despite more recent diplomatic overtures to Iran and Syria.
The country's security forces co-operate closely with the US, and are efficient in monitoring the activities of Islamic militants.

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