ISTANBUL: Milliyet was wiretapped – former deputy police chief

Hurriyet, Turkey
May 30 2010

Turkey’s daily Milliyet was wiretapped, says former deputy police chief

Sunday, May 30, 2010
NEDÄ°M Å?ENER
ISTANBUL – Milliyet

A former top police officer who was arrested in a drug trafficking
investigation said Saturday that he was told in August 2008 that the
phone lines at the daily Milliyet were wiretapped.

Former Deputy Police Chief Emin Aslan, arrested in September 2009,
said during a hearing in his ongoing trial that a group in the Police
Department was wiretapping journalists, politicians, judges and
bureaucrats through the use of IMEI numbers.

`I criticized the IMEI wiretaps during the meetings, but nothing has
changed. To the contrary, some intelligence officials told me that my
telephone and also daily Milliyet’s phones were tapped,’ said Aslan,
adding that if the court can ask the Telecommunication Transmission
Directorate, or TÄ°B, for details about the wiretappings. Aslan said he
did not know whether Milliyet had any mobile telecommunication system
but was told it did and that the system had been tapped.

IMEI numbers are similar to serial numbers and are used to identify
mobile devices on telecommunication networks.

Aslan said he believed that some people were unhappy because he
mentioned in public the negligence of institutions in the
investigation of the murder of Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.
He said daily Milliyet also published many stories about the Dink
case, implying that the newspaper might have been wiretapped by those
who are investigating Dink’s case. Aslan was released pending trial
after Saturday’s hearing.

Wiretapping process

Both cell phones and land phones can be wiretapped. All phone calls
can be wiretapped by using the phone number of a cell phone or land
phone, but the wiretapping can occasionally be done by using IMEI
numbers through a court decision. With access to a phone’s IMEI
number, all lines used via the communication device can be wiretapped.

Mobile systems can be used by firms that sign a contract with a
telecommunications operator. The firm assigns a number and if this
number is wiretapped, then it is possible to record all phone calls
made over the system, according to an expert. When a firm’s
switchboard is wiretapped, then all lines connected to the board can
be tapped and all calls recorded. It is possible to wiretap calls to
extension numbers and calls made from external lines, as well as to
wiretap and record simultaneous phone calls through the switchboard.

Only three institutions can legally wiretap phones: the Police
Department, the National Intelligence Unit, or MÄ°T, and the
Gendarmerie, but the three institutions cannot install a wiretap
without a court order.

When they have a court order, they have to send it to TÄ°B for approval.

After the wiretapping is complete, the Police Department, MÄ°T and
Gendarmerie bring the records together and deliver them to the court.
The recordings cannot be shared between the institutions or with the
TÄ°B as only the courts can legally use the recordings.

The phone line used by Milliyet is also shared with Posta, Radikal and
Fanatik newspapers and all are located in the DoÄ?an Medya Center in
Ä°kitelli. All of them are DoÄ?an Media Group newspapers employing 850
people.

From: A. Papazian