Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Court Evidence Raises Questions About Involvement of Turkish Ofcls

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Court Evidence Raises Questions About Involvement of Turkish Ofcls

    The Eurasia Daily Monitor
    December 5, 2007 -- Volume 4, Issue 225


    COURT EVIDENCE RAISES QUESTIONS ABOUT INVOLVEMENT OF TURKISH OFFICIALS
    IN KILLING OF CHRISTIANS

    Evidence presented to the court during the trial of five youths
    accused of killing three Christians in the southeastern town of
    Malatya earlier this year have raised questions about the involvement
    of state officials in the murder.

    On April 18, the five are alleged to have tortured and brutally killed
    three employees of Zirve Yayincilk, a Christian publishing house in
    Malatya. Two of the victims were Turks and the other a German
    national. The murders shocked Turkey, particularly as they came less
    than three months after the January 19 killing in Istanbul of Hrant
    Dink, the editor of Agos, a newspaper serving Turkey's small
    community of Armenian Christians.

    Initially the Malatya murders were thought merely to have been the
    work of a group of impoverished Islamist youths, several of whom were
    staying in the same dormitory run by a local Islamic foundation. The
    assumption was that, even if the five had not acted spontaneously, it
    had been an emotional decision taken at relatively short notice.

    Under the Turkish judicial system, the individual hearings of a case
    are often spread over many months or years rather than being held on
    consecutive days, as is common in the United States and Western
    Europe. When the first hearing was held on November 23, the evidence
    presented by the public prosecutor contained detailed records of what
    were alleged to have been the victims' missionary activities. This
    outraged the lawyers representing their families, who accused the
    state-appointed prosecutor of trying to present the defense with
    grounds for citing mitigating circumstances by claiming that their
    clients had been provoked (Radikal, Milliyet, NTV, November 24).

    It has now emerged that, in the six months preceding the murders, four
    of the suspects changed their telephones a total of 106 times,
    suggesting a concerted attempt to avoid surveillance. The cost of
    changing telephones so frequently has also raised the question of
    whether they were receiving financial support. Perhaps more
    alarmingly, the records of the telephones used by the accused showed
    that those with whom they had been in regular contact included a local
    council member from the ultranationalist Nationalist Action Party
    (MHP), someone in the Ankara headquarters of the Special Police Unit,
    a public prosecutor, and a member of the military (Milliyet, Radikal,
    Vatan, NTV, CNN-Turk, November 4).

    There is nothing to suggest that the institutions themselves were
    involved in the murders. However, the latest revelations have
    disturbing parallels with the trial of those suspected of killing
    Hrant Dink and have raised questions about the prevalence of racist
    and religious prejudices among those responsible for maintaining law
    and order. At the trial of Dink's suspected murderer, it emerged
    that, despite reporting numerous death threats, Dink had not been
    offered police protection. More worryingly, telephone records
    presented to the court suggested that some of those accused of
    Dink's murder had close links with elements in the police force in
    their native city of Trabzon, on Turkey's eastern Black Sea
    coast. After the main suspect had been arrested, the Turkish media
    published photographs taken by the detaining officers, showing him a
    variety of heroic poses in front of the Turkish flag. Similarly,
    after a 16 year-old was convicted of the February 2006 murder in
    Trabzon of the Italian priest Andrea Santoro, his family received
    photographs taken by detaining police showing their son proudly
    displaying a Turkish flag (Milliyet, October 5).

    On November 28, the Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation
    (TESEV) published the results of a survey of the attitudes of members
    of the Turkish judiciary. A total of 51% of the judges and public
    prosecutors questioned said that they regarded human rights, including
    the freedom of expression, as a threat to national security and unity,
    compared with only 28% who did not. Some 63% believed that the
    European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) was prejudiced against Turkey
    and 49% were opposed to the Turkish cases being taken to the court at
    all. Perhaps more worryingly, 53% of judges said that they paid no
    attention at all to any agreements signed by Turkey relating to basic
    freedoms and rights (NTV, CNNTurk, November 28, Radikal, November 29).

    The full details of the events leading up to Dink's murder are
    still not clear. The next hearing of the case involving the killings
    in Malatya is currently scheduled for January 14, although the case is
    not expected to be concluded until late summer or fall 2008 at the
    earliest. The evidence against the accused, most of whom were arrested
    at the scene of the crime, is so strong that few doubt that they will
    be convicted. However, there has as yet been no attempt to investigate
    some of the other questions raised by the case, not least what appears
    to be a recurring pattern whereby those involved in high-profile
    racist and religious hate crimes appear not only to have been in close
    contact with state officials but have subsequently been feted as
    heroes by members of the institutions responsible for enforcing law
    and order in Turkey.

    --Gareth Jenkins

    ----------------------------------------- -----------------------------------

    The Eurasia Daily Monitor, a publication of the Jamestown Foundation,
    is edited by Ann E. Robertson. The opinions expressed in it are those
    of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent those of
    the Jamestown Foundation. If you have any questions regarding the
    content of EDM, or if you think that you have received this email in
    error, please respond to [email protected].

    Unauthorized reproduction or redistribution of EDM is strictly
    prohibited by law.

    The Jamestown Foundation
    1111 16th St., NW
    Suite #320
    Washington, DC 20036
    202-483-8888 (phone)
    202-483-8337 (fax)
    http://www.jamestown.org

    Copyright (c) 1983-2007 The Jamestown Foundation.
Working...
X