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Fury after police pictured posing with Dink murder suspect

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  • Fury after police pictured posing with Dink murder suspect

    Fury after police pictured posing with Dink murder suspect


    · Turkish papers criticise hero treatment of teenager
    · Dead journalist's genocide claims upset nationalists

    Agencies in Ankara
    Saturday February 3, 2007
    The Guardian

    Outrage at the murder of the Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
    deepened yesterday after the media showed images of the teenage murder
    suspect posing with the Turkish flag and security officials after his
    arrest. The government launched an inquiry into the footage, which
    newspapers denounced as "hero treatment" of the 17-year-old suspect.

    Ogun Samast confessed to the January 19 killing of Dink, a 52-year-old
    journalist who had angered Turkish nationalists with assertions that
    the mass killings of Armenians around the time of the first world war
    amounted to genocide.

    The images showed Mr Samast holding a Turkish flag and posing with
    officers, some in uniform, shortly after his arrest on January
    21. Behind him a poster carries the words of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
    the founder of modern Turkey: "The nation's land is sacred. It cannot
    be left to fate." The Turkish media was outraged. "Shoulder to
    shoulder with the triggerman: suspected killer Samast was given the
    hero treatment," the Sabah daily reported on its front page.

    Ismet Berkan, the editor-in-chief of liberal newspaper Radikal, said
    the release of the video images was like killing Dink a second time
    and showed nationalism in Turkey was on the rise.

    Later Friday, the state-owned Anatolia news agency reported that four
    police officers in Samsun, where the photographs were taken, had been
    dismissed and four military police had been moved to other
    assignments.

    It was not clear whether the eight officers were the ones who posed
    with Mr Samast.

    Initial reports said the photographs were taken in a military police
    office at the bus station where Mr Samast was captured, but military
    police said they were taken at a police station nearby. A statement
    urged the media to be cautious in publicising "attempts aimed at
    fraying the Turkish armed forces" and expressed concern about the
    motives of those who leaked the images.

    "We in the police will do everything necessary," national police
    spokesman Ismail Caliskan promised at a news conference. "Whoever is
    responsible will be given the appropriate punishment."
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