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  • Anger as film shows police posing with editor's killer

    The Times, UK
    Feb 2 2007

    Anger as film shows police posing with editor's killer

    Suna Erdem in Istanbul



    Four policemen have been suspended from duty after posing in front of
    a Turkish flag with the suspected murderer of an ethnic Armenian
    journalist. Another four security police have been transferred to
    other duties after film of the incident was shown on Turkish
    television, offering further apparent evidence that the killing may
    have had support from within the security forces.
    It shows officials, some in uniform, arm-in-arm with Ogun Samast, who
    has confessed to the murder of Hrant Dink, the Editor of Agos, a
    bilingual Armenian-Turkish newspaper.



    Mr Dink, 52, was hated by ultra-nationalists for his writings about
    the mass killing of Armenians on Ottoman soil during the First World
    War.

    In the film, broadcast by TGRT television after days of official
    denials that such footage existed, the military police are seen with
    Samast under a quotation by Kemal Ataturk, the revered founder of
    modern Turkey, saying: `The nation's land is sacred. It cannot be
    left to its fate.' Someone out of vision calls Samast `my lion', and
    urges him to tidy his hair.

    Since the murder on January 19, the media have been alleging some
    degree of involvement from within the state. Even Tayyip Erdogan, the
    Prime Minister, has questioned whether the killing was the work of
    Turkey's `deep state' - shadowy nationalist elements in the security
    forces willing to act outside the law. He has also acknowledged that
    exposing the `deep state' was almost impossible.

    `This cassette is proof that the murderer and his partners in crime
    are not alone, and that people who, when necessary, can perform
    similar acts are spreading throughout the state apparatus - primarily
    the police and paramilitary organisations,' wrote Ismet Berkan,
    Editor of Radikal, the liberal daily newspaper.

    Ismail Caliskan, a police spokesman, said the officers involved were
    being investigated. But the military police attacked those who leaked
    and used the pictures. `We expect the media to be more sensitive with
    respect to deliberate attempts to damage the Turkish armed forces,' a
    statement said.

    Despite periodic official attempts to play down the implications, the
    Dink investigation continues to produce revelations pointing to
    complicity, or at least tacit support for the murder, from within
    state ranks.

    First the Interior Ministry sacked the police chief and governor of
    Trabzon, the Black Sea town where Samast lived, for failing to act
    against what appears to be a hotbed of violent nationalism. Police
    were criticised for failing to keep tabs on Yasin Hayal, the man who
    admitted inciting Samast, since he was released from jail after
    serving a sentence for bombing a McDonald's restaurant in 2004.

    It was then revealed that an ultra-nationalist who had associated
    with Hayal was a police informer and had exposed plans to kill Mr
    Dink eleven months previously.

    Thousands of mourners attended the funeral of Mr Dink last week in
    protest against a tide of nationalism, which has prompted some
    politicians to play the right-wing card ahead of elections this year.
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