Turkish mafia boss claims former PM’s son, ex-minister part of int’l drug trafficking scheme

Last year's drug bust in Colombia
In response to Soylu's accusations on the mafia leader being a part of a major international drug trafficking scheme, Peker made shocking claims on a drug bust that took place in Colombia on June 9 of last year. Colombian authorities at the time announced that they have seized 4.9 tons of cocaine headed for Turkey.¡Felicitaciones a la @PoliciaAntiNar por duro golpe contra el narcotráfico! En Buenaventura fueron incautadas 4,9 toneladas de cocaína que tenían como destino final Turquía, donde tendría un costo aproximado de 265 millones de dólares. @PoliciaColombia pic.twitter.com/zttgaBi8aZ
— Carlos Holmes Trujillo (@CarlosHolmesTru) June 9, 2020
A businessman in Turkish Cyprus
When it comes to the money traffic, Peker pointed to Halil Falyalı, a so-called businessman in Turkish Cyprus who allegedly gained massive wealth through illegal means, mainly betting. "Falyalı has ten different court cases against him in Turkey. Why aren't you bringing him to Turkey?" Peker asked authorities. Saying that he doesn't believe that the former prime minister is involved in the scheme, Peker noted that Erkan Yıldırım was initially made a part of this scheme because of footage showing him conducting illegal businesses. The mafia leader also claimed that Yıldırım stays in Falyalı's hotels during his visits to Turkish Cyprus. "This is the whole scheme," he said, adding that Mehmet Ağar is central to the scheme. "Look at the friendship between Süleyman Soylu and Erkan Yıldırım," Peker said. Following Peker's video, journalist Cüneyt Özdemir shared a tweet from the Turkish Embassy in Caracas dated Dec. 7, 2020 during his YouTube broadcast, which showed Yıldırım posing for a photo with a Turkish delegation that headed to the Venezuelan capital as part of an official visit.Diputados @AvSerkanBayram (el Presidente del Grupo Interparlamentario de Amistad Venezuela-Turquía) y @jiskenderogl, los miembros de Consejo Supremo Electoral, Yunus Aykın y Ekrem Özübek, y el Presidente de @LAMER_CEL, Prof. Dr. Necati Kutlu, visitaron las escuelas @TMaarifVakfi. pic.twitter.com/tNWF7PaOxr
— Turquía en Caracas (@embajadacaracas) December 7, 2020
Peker accuses Ağar, former intel official of murdering journalists Mumcu, Adalı
Another chilling accusation that Peker made concerned Ağar and former intelligence official Korkut Eken, whom he said are responsible for the unsolved murders of journalists Uğur Mumcu and Kutlu Adalı. Peker said that he was approached by Eken and Ağar to murder Adalı in Turkish Cyprus in 1996, adding that they would usually ask for his help in businessmen accused of helping the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and not extrajudicial killings. "Eken told me that Adalı wants to sell Turkish Cyprus to the Greek Cypriots and he needs two professionals for the killing. I told him that I will assign my own brother, Atilla Peker, since he is an expert. I said, 'He is very good at these,'" Peker said, citing Eken and his brother's tickets to the Turkish Cyprus as proof. "Thank God his blood is not on our hands. He foresaw today's Turkey and was honorable. He was not cooperating with the Greeks," Peker said. According to the mafia leader, Eken returned to Turkey a couple of days later and told him that they couldn't find the chance to kill Adalı. "He told me that they would try again later on. Another team under Eken and Ağar killed him. Atilla Peker was resting at home after his cancer surgery at the time of the murder. I would have told you if we were the ones who killed him because there is a statute of limitations and a judicial process can't be launched now," Peker said. "Kutlu Adalı saw that gambling and drug dealing were increasingly taking their hold on the Turkish Cyprus and was working to prevent that," the mafia boss added. "They [Ağar and Eken] will now ask me why I kept my silence. Are you speaking the truth about everything you witnessed? We are the same."
Yıllardır hep söyledik şimdi yine söylüyoruz. Savaş Buldan ve arkadaşları Devleti yönetenler tarafından öldürüldü. Cinayeti işleyenler göstermelik yargılandı ve beraat etti. Şimdi yeniden başadönüyoruz ve yargılanmaları icin girişimde bulunacağız..
— Pervin BULDAN (@PervinBuldan) May 23, 2021
'Killer returns to the scene'
Turning to Mumcu's murder, Peker said that Ağar ordered his killing because the journalist was writing about "terror lords." "Drug fields and weapons trade exist in terror zones. Mumcu was working on these. He was killed for writing about those feeding on terror," Peker said. "Mumcu was martyred. Who showed up the first? Mehmet Ağar. The killer returns to the scene of the crime the first," he added. Shortly after the mafia boss' video, Mumcu's wife Güldal Mumcu called on all those who know details about the murder to speak up.Senelerdir Uğur Mumcu cinayetinin aydınlatılması için kim ne biliyorsa anlatsın, işin ucu kime dokunuyorsa dokunsun dedik. Bu görüşümüzü korumaya devam ediyoruz. Çekin tuğlaları yıkılsın duvar altında kim kalırsa kalsın.
— Guldal Mumcu (@guldalmumcu) May 23, 2021