Mehmet Ağar

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Mehmet Ağar
Minister of Interior
In office
June 26, 1996 – November 8, 1996
Prime MinisterNecmettin Erbakan
Preceded byÜlkü Güney
Succeeded byMeral Akşener
Minister of Justice
In office
March 6, 1996 – June 29, 1996
Prime MinisterMesut Yılmaz
Preceded byFiruz Çilingiroğlu
Succeeded byŞevket Kazan
Personal details
Born (1951-10-30) October 30, 1951 (age 72)
Çankaya, Ankara, Turkey
Political partyTrue Path Party (DYP)
RelationsTolga Ağar (children)
Alma materAnkara University
OccupationPolitician

Mehmet Kemal Ağar (born on 30 October 1951) is a Turkish former police chief,

General Director of the General Directorate of Security (effectively national police chief), serving from 1993 to 1995, before entering parliament and serving as a government minister in 1996. After being sentenced to several years in prison for criminal activities relating to the Susurluk scandal
, he was released on probation in April 2013.

Background and personal life

Mehmet Ağar was born on October 30, 1951, at the

Çankaya Köşkü
in Ankara, where his father was serving as security. During his youth, he toured several places across the country due to his father's position as police chief.

He began his high school education in Ankara, continued in

. Graduated in 1972, Mehmet Ağar became a police officer.

Mehmet Ağar, married in 1974 Emel Ağar. The couple has a son Tolga and a daughter Yasemin.[citation needed]

Career

He later served as a police inspector in the security force for the state president.[

counter-terrorism section of Istanbul Police.[citation needed] The next year, he was promoted to director of security in Istanbul.[citation needed] At the same time, he became chief of the Counter-Guerrilla, a clandestine stay-behind anti-communist initiative backed by NATO and the United States.[citation needed
]

Mehmet Ağar served between 1984 and 1988 as the vice police chief of Istanbul for the

MIT Report that targeted former high ranking civil servants and politicians such as Ağar, Nevzat Ayaz and Ünal Erkan.[1]

In 1988, he became police chief of Ankara and in 1990

Gendarmerie against the Kurdistan Workers' Party PKK in rural areas.[citation needed
]

He resigned from the police after entering parliament in 1995.[citation needed]

Political career

Mehmet Ağar entered politics as deputy of Elazığ from the True Path Party (DYP) following the general elections 1995.[citation needed]

Mehmet Ağar was appointed the Minister of Justice in 1996. He served later in the next government's coalition cabinet as the Minister of the Interior. He resigned from this post on November 8, 1996, protesting Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan's official visit to Libya. At the 1999 general elections, Ağar run for a seat in the parliament as independent deputy from Elazığ, and received the highest number of votes an independent candidate ever achieved.

The True Path Party (DYP) lost the

Turkish Grand National Assembly
. After Çiller's resignation, Ağar was elected as the new president of the True Path Party.

On May 5, 2007, it was announced that DYP and the

Democratic Party
(Demokrat Parti). For that occasion, DYP renamed itself (based on the previous party of the same name), and it was planned that ANAP would join the newly founded DP.

Mehmet Agar resigned from his position as the leader of DP following the 22 July 2007 election.[2]

Susurluk scandal

With the Susurluk scandal of 1996, his political career ended for some time when it turned out he had stayed in a hotel with the victims of the Susurluk car crash immediately before the incident. He famously said "I will talk if the state wants me to" to a commission investigating the affair. He escaped justice at the time due to his parliamentary immunity, however, he was retried starting on February 9, 2009, at the Ankara 11th High Criminal Court.[2]

The Susurluk report contained the following information:[3]

  • On 19 October 1984, when he was İstanbul Deputy Chief of Police, he held a meeting with ultra-nationalist activist Celal Adan.
  • On July 3, 1985, while serving as Public Order Branch Director at İstanbul Police HQ, he contacted owners of a company, İbrahim Aslan and Mahmut Şahin, who were followers of the
    Süleymancı sect
    , and gave them the files and other information about the investigation carried out against members of the Süleymancı sect, which should have been kept secret.
  • On September 4, 1986, ultra-nationalist activist Selim Kaptanoğlu declared that "they had been engaged in collecting of checks and vouchers; they had collected money from the Mafia bosses in the name of Alparslan Türkeş; they had given part of this money to Alpaslan Türkeş and another part to the ultra-nationalist activists in the prisons; and while doing this they had been in close contact to the Deputy Chief of Police, Mehmet Ağar."
  • It was determined that on December 5, 1990, he took a bribe from
    Süleymancı sect
    .
  • He pushed for ultra-nationalists candidates to be chosen to the Police Academy in the examinations of the academy held on September 29, 1993.
  • He was elected Member of the Parliament from
    True Path Party (DYP) in the general elections
    held on December 24, 1995.
  • Ağar was assigned the post of Minister of Justice in the cabinet of the 53rd Government, the coalition government of Motherland Party (ANAP) and DYP in 1996. He became Minister of the Interior in the 54th Government, the coalition government of Welfare Party (RP) and DYP formed in the same year; and he resigned on November 8, 1996.

Trial

On September 15, 2011, he was sentenced to five years in prison for his role in the Susurluk scandal as the leader of a criminal organization. Following the High Court of Appeals's approval of the ruling made by the criminal court in Ankara, he was interned on April 25, 2012, in a small district prison of type K1 in Yenipazar, Aydın, which was chosen for his personal security reasons.[4] After his sentence was reduced to three years and nine months, he was released on probation in April 2013.[5]

Books

  • Sefa Kaplan (2007), Mehmet Ağar: Geleceği etkileyecek liderler,
    Doğan Kitapçılık

References

  1. ^ Mercan, Faruk (2000-04-12). "Özel Dostalar/Mehmet Eymür-İstihbaratçının dava dosyası". Zaman (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2010-08-30.
  2. ^ a b "Mehmet Ağar to appear in court in February". Today's Zaman. 2008-12-25. Retrieved 2008-12-27.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "1998 Report" (PDF). Human Rights Foundation of Turkey. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 5, 2009. (contains the Susurluk reports in English)
  4. ^ "Mehmet Ağar teslim oldu". CNN Türk (in Turkish). 2012-04-25. Retrieved 2012-05-26.
  5. ^ Today's Zaman, 29 April 2013, Former minister and Susurluk convict Mehmet Ağar released on probation Archived 2013-05-23 at the Wayback Machine
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the True Path Party (DYP)
Dec 14, 2002 – Jan 6, 2008
Succeeded by