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ANKARA: Ministry Opens Inquiry Into Malatya Police Officers

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  • ANKARA: Ministry Opens Inquiry Into Malatya Police Officers

    MINISTRY OPENS INQUIRY INTO MALATYA POLICE OFFICERS

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Dec 10 2007

    The Interior Ministry has finally opened an investigation into
    allegations of obstruction of justice and destruction of evidence
    by police to protect suspects charged with killing three Christians
    earlier this year at a publishing house that produces Bibles, a
    ministry official announced on Saturday.

    Two senior police inspectors will be assigned to investigate whether
    any officers provided assistance to the suspects, Interior Ministry
    officials said. "Depending on the results of the investigation, the
    necessary legal actions will be taken against any police personnel
    involved," officials were quoted as saying by daily Radikal.

    The three Christians -- a German and two Turks -- were killed in the
    southern city of Malatya on April 18. The killings -- in which the
    victims were tied up and had their throats slit -- drew international
    condemnation.

    Five people were arrested and charged with murder. The trial started
    last month but was quickly adjourned until Jan. 14 because defense
    attorneys requested more time to prepare their arguments.

    The Interior Ministry decided to launch an investigation after several
    newspapers published stories Saturday alleging cooperation between
    police and at least one of the suspects.

    Reports in newspapers quoted two of the suspects, Abuzer Yýldýrým
    and Salih Guler, as saying in their testimony that a third suspect,
    Emre Gunaydýn, told them that he had met with police officials and
    learned about the locations of Christian churches in the city.

    "I asked him, 'Who are the police chiefs you were talking to?' He said,
    'Don't ask, take it easy'," newspapers quoted Yýldýrým as saying.

    Similar allegations emerged after the January killing of an ethnic
    Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink, who was detested by hard-line
    nationalists because he described the mass killings of Armenians
    in the early 20th century as genocide, a charge that Turkey denies,
    insisting those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.

    Critics have accused authorities of failing to act on reports of
    a plot to kill Dink, but there has been no evidence that directly
    implicates any police or government officials in the slaying of Dink
    outside his office.

    Many Turks are convinced that a phenomenon called the "deep state"
    -- a network of state agents or ex-officials, possibly with links to
    organized crime -- periodically targets reformists and what they deem
    perceived enemies of the state in the name of nationalism.

    Christian leaders have said they are worried that nationalists are
    stoking hostility against non-Turks and non-Muslims by exploiting
    uncertainty over Turkey's place in the world. Many analysts believe
    some of the recent killings targeting non-Muslims, including the
    killing of an Italian priest in Trabzon last year, were attempts
    directed at derailing Turkey's EU membership process.

    --Boundary_(ID_zBDxuw6lUQ0dKdHBtUmNVg)--
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