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Turkey: Probe into journalist's murder is beefed up

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  • Turkey: Probe into journalist's murder is beefed up

    AKI, Italy
    Jan 31 2007

    TURKEY: PROBE INTO JOURNALIST'S MURDER IS BEEFED UP


    Istanbul, 31 Jan. (AKI) - Turkish authorities have dispatched two
    chief inspectors to Trabzon, the hometown of the alleged killer of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, to boost the murder
    investigation - a move which comes amid a growing storm over the
    police's possible failure to prevent the murder through negligence.
    Turkish media on Tuesday cited sources from the National Police
    Department who confirmed the authorities had received information
    about a planned attack against Dink one year ago, but that no attempt
    was made to investigate the threats.

    Dink was shot dead on 19 January in front of the Istanbul office of
    the newspaper he edited. A 17-year-old boy from Trabzon, Ogun Samast,
    was arrested in connection with the murder after he was recognised
    from closed circuit television footage taken at the scene of the
    shooting.

    According to the police sources, Erhan Tuncel, a university student
    in Trabzon with links to a Turkish ultra-nationalist group blamed for
    the killing, warned local police in February 2006 of a plan to
    assassinate the prominent journalist who campaigned for Turkey to
    recognise as genocide the mass killings of Armenians under the
    Ottomans during the early 20th century.

    Tuncel, an alleged police informer and one of the six suspects
    charged in connection with Dink's killing - is being interrogated in
    Istanbul by the counter-terrororism police.

    Tuncel has reportedly told police that Yasin Hayal, also under arrest
    in connection with the murder, had planned to travel from Trabzon to
    Istanbul to kill Dink, and that this intelligence was passed on to
    Istanbul police. Police allegedly found nothing suspicious and took
    no further action, the Milliyet daily reported on Tuesday.

    Tuncel turned informer in 2004 in exchange for immunity after he was
    detained in connection with a bomb attack on a McDonald's restaurant
    in Trabzon, for which Hayal served 11 months in jail. In the summer
    of 2006, police stopped working with Tuncel on suspicion that he was
    acting as a double agent on behalf of the ultra-nationalists, the
    Milliyet report said.

    Human rights activists are urging prosecutors to investigate
    Istanbul's police chief, Celaleddin Cerrah, who they alleged has been
    negligent over the murder. Cerrah has also drawn criticism for his
    statements that Samast "has no links with terror groups," and that
    "his nationalist sentiments motivated him to shoot Dink," in the
    immediate aftermath of the murder suspect's arrest.

    Dink branded a "traitor" by ultra-nationalists for urging open debate
    on the massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire, often
    appeared in court on charges of violating an item in Turkey's penal
    code that prohibits any questioning of the officially accepted
    version that the genocide did not take place. The European Union -
    which Turkey hopes to join - has repeatedly called for the scrapping
    of the controversial 'offending Turkishness' article in the penal
    code.

    Since Dink's murder, which prompted mass demonstrations in his honour
    and in favour of freedom of expression, the government has come under
    increasing criticism for failing to deal with extremist groups.

    Prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was quoted as saying on Tuesday
    that Turkey had paid a heavy price for not cracking down on what he
    called the "deep state" - a term which refers to secretive
    nationalist elements in the powerful Turkish military and
    bureaucracy.
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