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Istanbul Police Chief Investigated In Journalist Murder

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  • Istanbul Police Chief Investigated In Journalist Murder

    ISTANBUL POLICE CHIEF INVESTIGATED IN JOURNALIST MURDER

    Agence France Presse -- English
    February 7, 2007 Wednesday

    Turkey's interior ministry has ordered an investigation against
    Istanbul's police chief and a senior officer amid charges that police
    failed to act on threats against slain ethnic Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink, a ministry official said Wednesday.

    The probe against police chief Celalettin Cerrah and Ahmet Ilhan Guler,
    former head of Istanbul police's intelligence unit, follows a request
    by investigators probing alleged police negligence in Dink's killing,
    the offical told AFP on the condition of anonymity.

    "The inspectors have found certain administrative and judicial faults
    by these two officers. They will now be asked to give a statement
    with regards to the findings," he added.

    Investigators will then decide whether there is a need for a judicial
    investigation against the two officers which could pave the way for
    charges against them, he added.

    The Istanbul police has come under intense criticism following the
    January 19 murder amid media reports that they received a tip-off
    last year of a plot to kill the 52-year-old editor of the bilingual
    Agos weekly, but did not follow up on it.

    Police have arrested eight suspects, all hailing from the northern
    city of Trabzon, in connection with Dink's murder.

    One of them, 17-year-old Ogun Samast, has confessed to killing Dink,
    a prominent member of Turkey's small Armenian community who was hated
    by nationalists for labelling as genocide the World War I killings
    of Armenians.

    Another is Yasin Hayal, 26, who served 11 months in jail for a 2004
    bomb blast outside a McDonald's restaurant in Trabzon and allegedly
    gave Samast money and a gun to kill Dink.

    Trabzon's governor and police chief have already been removed from
    office amid accusations that they failed to seriously investigate
    groups of youths under the sway of ultra-nationalist and Islamist
    ideas.

    The probe into Dink's murder has proved a serious embarrassment for
    the Turkish security forces.

    Ten members of the police and a paramilitary force have been dismissed
    from their posts in the northern city of Samsun, where Samast was
    arrested on January 20, after a video was leaked to the media last
    week showing security forces posing with the alleged assailant for
    "souvenir pictures".

    The police are also under fire for failing to grant Dink special
    protection, even though the journalist mentioned in articles in his
    bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos that he was receiving threats
    and hate mail.
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