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Senior Turkish police officer removed over Dink's murder

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  • Senior Turkish police officer removed over Dink's murder

    Southeast European Times, MD
    Feb 9 2007

    Senior Turkish police officer removed over Dink's murder
    09/02/2007

    The head of Istanbul's police intelligence was suspended this week as
    part of the investigation into the murder of a prominent
    Turkish-Armenian journalist who had angered nationalists.

    (AP, AFP, International Herald Tribune, The New York Times, The New
    Anatolian - 08/02/07; Zaman - 07/02/07; AP, BBC, VOA, Turkish Daily
    News - 06/02/07; AFP, BBC - 02/02/07)


    Video footage showed Hrant Dink's confessed killer, Ogun Samast,
    posing with police officers and a Turkish flag. [Getty Images]

    A senior Turkish police officer was removed from duty this week
    following revelations that police were warned in advance about the
    planned murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink. Police
    reportedly received a tip about the plot in February 2006.

    "I admit all my guilt for not sharing the intelligence I received
    regarding the assassination plot," a report in The New Anatolian on
    Thursday (February 8th) quoted the head of Istanbul's police
    intelligence, Ahmet Ilhan Guler, as saying.

    He was suspended late Monday as part of the investigation into the
    murder. The Interior Ministry also has reportedly cleared the way for
    a probe into Istanbul Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah's actions. Dink,
    52, the editor-in-chief of the Istanbul-based bilingual
    Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, was gunned down in broad daylight on
    January 19th, outside his office.

    Ogun Samast, a 17-year-old from the eastern city of Trabzon, has
    confessed to killing the journalist because he "insulted Turkish
    blood". Seven other people have been arrested on suspicion of
    involvement in the case. All of them are from Trabzon.

    Dink angered Turkish nationalists by maintaining that the killings of
    some 1.5 million Armenians in the waning days of the Ottoman empire
    amounted to genocide, a characterisation that Ankara firmly denies.

    Trabzon Governor Huseyin Yavuzdemir and Police Chief Resat Altay were
    removed from office soon after the murder.

    Guler's suspension came only days after five police officers and five
    members of the Gendarmerie in the Black Sea province of Samsun were
    dismissed after the release of video footage that showed them posing
    alongside Samast and giving him a "hero's welcome".

    The footage rekindled concerns among Turks about the existence of a
    shadowy "deep state" -- a term denoting hardline nationalists
    operating within the state ready to breach the law in defence of
    their beliefs.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has pledged to deal with what he
    described as "gangs within state institutions".

    Dink's funeral was attended by more than 100,000 people, who silently
    expressed their protest against hardline nationalism, blaming his
    death also on Article 301 in Turkey's penal code.

    Like Orhan Pamuk, the winner of last year's Nobel Prize for
    literature, and scores of other Turkish intellectuals, Dink was
    prosecuted under the controversial article, which makes it a crime to
    "insult Turkishness".

    A group of ten civic organisations submitted a proposal Thursday to
    amend the article, which has been widely criticised by the EU and
    international rights groups. "We believe our proposal will help
    overcome existing difficulties," Davut Okutcu, the head of the
    Economic Development Foundation, said in a televised news conference.


    The proposed amendments seek to better distinguish between legal
    criticism and illegal denigration. Among other changes, the draft
    reportedly proposes that the phrase "insulting Turkishness" be
    replaced by "openly scorning and deriding" the Turkish identity. Some
    groups, however, say Article 301 should be scrapped altogether,
    rather than simply toned down.

    "Leading up to the general elections in November, the government has
    escaped from political responsibility on a controversial issue like
    Article 301 in fear of losing voters," the International Herald
    Tribune quoted Gencay Gurun, the general secretary of the Turkish
    Chamber of Doctors, as saying on Thursday.

    "Changes are only a facade and can never prevent bitter consequences,
    as we've witnessed with Mr. Dink's murder," he said.
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