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ANKARA: Turkey hit by scandalous aftershocks from Dink murder

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  • ANKARA: Turkey hit by scandalous aftershocks from Dink murder

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 2 2007


    Turkey hit by scandalous aftershocks from Dink murder


    The police launched a probe and the government vowed not to tolerate
    gangs within security organizations after Turkish media published
    scandalous images showing members of security forces posing for
    pictures with the alleged murderer of Turkish-Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink after his arrest.


    Video footage of 17-year-old Ogün Samast, the suspected murderer of
    Dink, posing in front of a Turkish flag and holding another flag next
    to security officials sent shockwaves across Turkey when it was first
    broadcast on private Turkish television, TGRT, on Thursday night.
    The Turkish press was outraged yesterday, describing the footage as
    scandalous and saying it was as appalling as the murder of Dink on
    Jan. 19. Dink was gunned down outside his office in broad daylight,
    and Samast reportedly told the police that he killed Dink because he
    had said "Turkish blood is dirty."
    Samast was seen in the video holding out a Turkish flag and posing
    with officers, some of them in uniform. Behind Samast was a poster
    with another Turkish flag carrying the words of Mustafa Kemal
    Atatürk, the revered founder of modern Turkey: "The nation's land is
    sacred. It cannot be left to fate." A voice in the video can be heard
    asking if the quote on the poster can be arranged above the suspect's
    head. Someone also tells Samast to fix his hair.
    Blasting the episode, daily Sabah said in its headline: "Shoulder to
    shoulder with the triggerman: suspected killer Samast was given the
    hero treatment. "A kiss on the forehead is the only thing the
    murderer was not given," growled daily Radikal. "This is the picture
    of the mindset that killed Dink."
    `We are in an effort to prevent such formations and attempts to set
    up gangs in violation of the supremacy of law,' Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdoðan said in response to questions over the footage. But
    when reminded of growing calls for resignation of senior officials,
    including Interior Minister Abdülkadir Aksu over the way the murder
    case has been handled, Erdoðan was cautious, saying such concepts
    should not be watered down.

    The police launched a probe after the leaking of the footage. "The
    pictures were shown on television in the evening and inspectors will
    clarify who took the pictures and why. We in the police will do
    everything necessary," police spokesman Ýsmail Çalýþkan told a weekly
    news conference. "Whoever is responsible will be given the
    appropriate punishment."
    The episode comes amid heightened debates over "deep state," the code
    for shadowy ultranationalist elements in the security forces, ready,
    if need be, to act outside the law. Authorities have been accused of
    failing to act on warnings that ultranationalists planned to murder
    Dink. Last week, the Interior Ministry dismissed the police chief and
    governor of Trabzon and sent prosecutors to investigate whether local
    authorities were at fault.
    The Dink murder case also raised possibilities that the police and
    the Gendarmerie Command, attached to the General Staff, could be at
    odds over the case.
    Earlier in the day, the gendarmerie released a statement, denying
    reports the footage was shot at one of their offices in Samsun, the
    city where Samast was arrested after a nationwide manhunt. It said
    the footage was shot in a police station cafeteria and angrily blamed
    its leakage to the media as a "purposeful act."
    "The military police personnel seen in the images were personnel
    assigned to hand over the suspect to the police," the gendarmerie
    statement said. Some of the security personnel were wearing
    gendarmerie uniforms while others were in police uniforms.
    Asked whether there was tension between the gendarmerie and the
    police, Erdoðan said there could be "ill-intentioned people who do
    not respect this country's values" in every organization and added
    that it was important to get the state organizations of such
    elements.
    "It needs to be emphasized that no one should be engaged in efforts
    to pit our institutions against each other," he told reporters in
    Ýstanbul. Erdoðan has already acknowledged that the "deep state" has
    operated in Turkey since Ottoman times and said Turkey has paid a
    heavy price for not dismantling it.
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