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  • ANKARA: Police, gendarmerie clash on gunman photo peaks

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    Jan 3 2007

    Police, gendarmerie clash on gunman photo peaks

    The New Anatolian / Ankara
    03 February 2007


    Following a sharp open exchange of accusations between the police and
    gendarmerie over last month's murder of journalist Hrant Dink, both
    the premier and the police spokesperson on Friday stressed the
    incorrectness of inter-institution debates before public.

    After a picture of gunman Ogun Samast appeared in newspapers a day
    after the assassination, raising questions of where the photo came
    from, the Interior Ministry, the police and gendarmerie all launched
    investigations.

    The pictures, reportedly taken from camera footage dated Jan. 21, two
    days before the murder, showed Samast standing before a Turkish flag
    poster and a statement from Ataturk reading, "The territory of the
    homeland is sacred. It cannot be left to fate." Voices in the video
    capture the image was taken from make it clear the tableau was
    deliberately prepared by those who captured the images.

    Initial reports Friday said that the photos were taken by the
    gendarmerie at the Samsun gendarmerie post near the Samsun bus
    station where the gunman was caught two weeks ago.

    However the gendarmerie, in an immediate comment later in the day,
    said that the images were recorded at the tea house of the Samsun
    Police's Anti-Terror Department. Police Spokesperson Ismail Caliskan,
    speaking to the press last week, confirmed the claim, but many said
    that officials from the gendarmerie were also at the scene during the
    shooting.

    At Friday's press conference, Caliskan said that he cannot give all
    details about the incident as inspectors are carrying out an
    investigation into both the location of the footage and the alleged
    negligence of the security officials on the Dink murder.

    He reiterated that the police don't hesitate to launch investigation
    into its members whoever they are. "I conveyed the information I
    received last week. The details will immediately be made public after
    the inspectors finalize their probe," he said.

    However he added that it was quite wrong to leak the photos to the
    media. "No good comes from driving state institutions to a public
    fight," he underlined.

    He also scolded the accused police officials by saying, "Police must
    never forget that they are professionals. No one has right to do his
    job under the influence of his feelings or thoughts," he said.

    He also refused to confirm the relationship between the police and
    the detained Erhan Tuncel, alleged to be the third man behind the
    murder and later a police informant. "It isn't appropriate to speak
    of people aiding the police with the press. People assist the police
    in various ways. It would be better if rumors about Tuncel didn't
    appear in the media," he said.

    PM: It's no good to bring public institutions at odds

    Premier Erdogan, speaking to a press conference in Istanbul on
    Friday, also scolded the debate between the police and gendarmerie,
    said that it is no good to lead public institutions into a fight.

    He also said that the investigation into the footage is underway,
    adding they are committed to do what ever they can and go the whole
    way.

    Erdogan lambasted the opposition, who put pressure on the government
    to suspend Istanbul police chief and Interior Minister Abdulkadir
    Aksu by saying that censure and suspension mechanisms lost their
    significance in Turkey.

    In related news another suspect, university student Tuncay Uzundal,
    was arrested in relation with the Dink murder, raising the number of
    arrests to eight.
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