Coupist terrorist organization understood to prevail over complicated drug-murder network which transfers heroin from Iran to Europe through key contact Naji Sharifi Zindashti and becomes tool of global barons
The investigation against the Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETÖ), which attempted the July 15 failed coup attempt in Turkey, has revealed fresh findings about the heroin trafficking of the terrorist group through an Iranian-origin smuggler Naji Sharifi Zindashti.
It was discovered that Zindashti took the control of the drug trafficking by intriguing against two judges by giving false testimony with the help of fugitive prosecutors Zekeriya Öz, who was in charge of conducting the Ergenekon and Balyoz investigations.
The ongoing probe discovered all the key contacts of Zindashti. The whole story of Zindashti was based on sneaking into countries by using fake IDs, as he himself entered Turkey that way after getting the death penalty in Iran.
As he continued to commit the same crimes in Turkey, he was arrested once but was soon released again, due to his false testimony against the judges who FETÖ prosecutor Öz wanted to remove from the cases.
As a consequence of these two names; two judges noses were put out of the legal process.
Zindashti also paid a large amount of money to FETÖ as a 'favor'.
Zindashti, after staying in Turkey for a while, married another Iranian citizen Nigar Fırat who was living in the southeastern Turkish province of Hakkari. He conveyed Fırat's ID to his wife in Iran and brought his wife in Iran to Turkey.
The cooperation of Zindashti and FETÖ was interrupted, as the heroin transferred in Greece was stolen by the smugglers. Zindashti, who stole the illegal drugs of global drug lords, faced death threats due to his burglary.
A large amount of the heroin was understood to belong to a Turkish heroin smuggler, Urfi Çetinkaya, who is known to be linked with the FETÖ terrorist organization, as the two parties made trade before.
The global drug gangs attempted to kill Zindashti more than once; however, they killed his family members instead of him in 2014 in Istanbul province.
However, FETÖ-linked key officers made a secret deal with the global drug gangs and interrupted the investigation by spoiling evidences. Over the request of the global barons, the suspects of the murder were released immediately.
A fake perpetrator was created and all the blame was put on another person, Orhan Önğan, who doesn't have a role in that crime.
Previously, the finding indicated that the FETÖ terrorist organization attempted to reveal state secrets after arranging a false tip-off prompting a search in the cosmic room, the military archive, to leave Turkey vulnerable against coup bids such as December 17 and 25 and July 15.
The search was conducted in 2009 over a false tip-off saying Turkey's former Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç would be assassinated.
On July 15, more than 240 people, including members of the security forces and civilians, were martyred in Istanbul and Ankara and nearly 2,000 others were wounded, as they protested against the coup bid.
Turkey accuses the Fetullah Gülen-led FETÖ terrorist organization of attempting the coup.
The records of Gülen were revealed while he was calling FETÖ terrorists to kill themselves if it is needed for the sake of the terrorist organization.