. . "69545194"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "And\u0131\u00E7 scandal"@en . . . . . . . "1092523862"^^ . . "6575"^^ . "The Andi\u00E7 scandal is the leaking of information to incriminate prominent journalists of an alleged cooperation with the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK). The \"And\u0131\u00E7\" document was prepared by the Turkish Generals \u00C7evik Bir and . The document falsely claimed to include statements by \u015Eemdin Sak\u0131k, one of the members of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), who was caught in 1998 by the authorities. These statements were published in H\u00FCrriyet and Sabah newspapers for two days on April 25, 1998. With the publication of the confessions said to belong to Sak\u0131k, the journalists mentioned in the confessions were dismissed from their jobs and there was an assassination attempt on Ak\u0131n Birdal, who survived with serious injuries. When he was later brought to court, Sak\u0131k declared that he did not make such "@en . . . . . "The Andi\u00E7 scandal is the leaking of information to incriminate prominent journalists of an alleged cooperation with the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK). The \"And\u0131\u00E7\" document was prepared by the Turkish Generals \u00C7evik Bir and . The document falsely claimed to include statements by \u015Eemdin Sak\u0131k, one of the members of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), who was caught in 1998 by the authorities. These statements were published in H\u00FCrriyet and Sabah newspapers for two days on April 25, 1998. With the publication of the confessions said to belong to Sak\u0131k, the journalists mentioned in the confessions were dismissed from their jobs and there was an assassination attempt on Ak\u0131n Birdal, who survived with serious injuries. When he was later brought to court, Sak\u0131k declared that he did not make such a statement. In October 2000, Nazl\u0131 Il\u0131cak delivered a document to journalists showing that all this was part of a psychological warfare tactic prepared by the General Staff's intelligence, and ten days after the publication of the document, the General Staff acknowledged the existence of the document called \"andi\u00E7\"."@en . . . .