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ANKARA: Crucial evidence obscured in Malatya murder case

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  • ANKARA: Crucial evidence obscured in Malatya murder case

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Dec 7 2007


    Crucial evidence obscured in Malatya murder case


    The police department knowingly misdirected an investigation into the
    brutal murders of three Bible publishers in the southeastern city of
    Malatya in April, evidence published in the Turkish press yesterday
    suggested.


    The new findings come amongst a number of incidents suggesting what
    seem to be attempts to cover up facts and destroy evidence regarding
    the murder of three men at the Zirve Publishing House in Malatya.
    Disturbing connections between the suspects in the Malatya murders
    and the military had already emerged during the first hearing in the
    suspects' trial last week. The latest such proof of the police
    seeming reluctant to shed light on the murders was an outright lie
    told by the head of the Malatya Police Department, reports in
    yesterday's papers said.

    Malatya Police Chief Ali Osman Kahya on Monday stated that video
    recordings from the hospital room of Emre Günaydýn, one of the
    attackers suspected of having masterminded the murders, taken during
    the time he spent in a Malatya hospital after falling from the
    publishing house's window while trying to escape from police, were
    submitted to the prosecutors.

    However, documents acquired by newspapers suggested otherwise. A
    number of newspapers published a scanned document, signed by a senior
    officer with the Malatya police, addressing the chief public
    prosecutor, announcing that the camera records had been "destroyed."
    Official documents signed by hospital officials also confirmed that
    this was the case.

    Suspiciously reminiscent of past murders

    Many here point to striking similarities between a shooting at the
    Council of State that killed a senior judge last year, the murder of
    ethnic-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink earlier this year and the
    brutal Malatya murders of April.

    In all of the cases the suspects said they had committed the crimes
    in the name of religion, the motherland or the nation. One of the
    suspects in these incidents had a Turkish flag in his pocket, another
    suspect had prayer inscriptions. However, all of the suspects were
    entirely the opposite of what those objects stand for.

    Emre Günaydýn, who was the leader of the gang that murdered three
    Christian men from the Zirve Publishing House in Malatya in April of
    this year, cited religious motivations in his testimony on the
    killings. However, he has recently admitted to having smoked
    marijuana on more than one occasion. His police file also indicates
    that a large number of photographs with adult content were found on
    his home computer.

    Ogün S., the teenager who shot Hrant Dink in January of this year,
    testified in court that he had taken two ecstasy pills and smoked
    marijuana before the murder.

    In the 2006 Council of State shooting, the suspects, who had said
    they acted in the name of God, have confessed that they came to know
    each other when they met at a bar. Pornographic material was also
    found on their computers. Acquaintances have depicted lawyer
    Alparslan Arslan, the hit man in the shooting, as a "non-religious
    person who drank a lot."
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