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ANKARA: Dink Murder Probe Pits Everyone Aganist Everyone Else

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  • ANKARA: Dink Murder Probe Pits Everyone Aganist Everyone Else

    DINK MURDER PROBE PITS EVERYONE AGANIST EVERYONE ELSE

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 12 2007

    Ogun Samast, the suspected killer of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink, was arrested soon after the murder on Jan. 19, but suspicions
    are growing over the motives behind the crime and who else may have
    been involved, despite his quick capture and immediate confession to
    the crime.

    An ongoing investigation into the abhorrent murder is already
    plagued by charges of information pollution and now it has come to
    be overshadowed by an intense battle raging on among politicians,
    within the security apparatus, and between the state institutions and
    the media. Bickering between the police and gendarmerie and between
    the media and the security organizations erupted in the early days of
    the probe, when a scandalous video showing members of the police and
    gendarmerie posing for photos with Samast at a police station hit the
    headlines.The gendarmerie angrily denied reports that the video had
    been shot at one of their stations and said the leakage to the media
    of the footage was purposeful. The TGRT television which first aired
    the video, and said it had been shot at a gendarmerie station, lost
    its press accreditation from the General Staff soon after the episode.

    Over the weekend, newspapers which have leveled tough charges against
    both institutions for their conduct before and after the murder,
    sharpened axes in a battle against the police. They said Yasin Hayal,
    one of the main suspects who has earlier confessed to inciting the
    murder, had been indirectly instructed by a senior police official
    in the Black Sea province of Trabzon to kill Dink by Erhan Tuncel,
    another key suspect who reportedly had worked with the police and the
    gendarmerie as an informant and gave them tip-offs about the plot to
    kill Dink several months before the assassination.

    Newspapers cited Hayal's lawyer and private notes in his notebook from
    a meeting he had with Hayal and said Yahya Ozturk, head of the police
    anti-terror department in Trabzon, had encouraged Erhan Tuncel. "This
    flag has fallen right to the ground. It is your duty to pick it up,"
    Ozturk apparently told Tuncel.

    The police angrily dismissed the reports as "unfounded, slanderous
    and fictitious." In a statement, the Police Department also vowed to
    seek legal action against those who "make and publish" the claim.

    Separately, Ozturk filed a complaint against newspapers which
    published the accusations, which he said were a "part of a smear
    campaign against me and my department."

    Newspapers have already grilled the police for failing to follow up on
    several tip-offs from Tuncel about the plot to kill Dink, and several
    columnists have backed calls for the resignation of Ýstanbul Police
    Chief Celalettin Cerrah over the conduct of the police both before
    and after the murder.

    Tuncel reportedly warned the police and the gendarmerie as early
    as 11 months before the killing. His connection with the police
    was suspiciously terminated a few months before the murder and
    his tip-offs were never followed up. Head of the Ýstanbul police
    intelligence department has recently been sacked for not heeding the
    warnings as part of an ongoing investigation and Cerrah may also face
    investigation on the same charges.

    Judiciary, MÝT also in the picture As the charges against the police
    mount, the media also questioned conduct of the judiciary in Trabzon,
    where Samast and Hayal come from. Hayal was arrested for a McDonalds
    bombing in 2004, injuring six people, but he was set free after a
    surprisingly brief ten-month term in jail. The Turkish daily newspaper,
    Milliyet, reported yesterday that members of the panel of judges
    that ruled for Hayal's release were all replaced with new members
    shortly before the court session. Two judges in the three-member
    panel were judges dealing with commercial disputes and property cases,
    Milliyet reported.

    Other reports claimed the National Intelligence Agency (MÝT) may also
    have played a role in the murder. On Saturday, the daily Hurriyet
    published what it said was part of Hayal's testimony at the police
    and said a MÝT member had told him after the McDonalds bombing that
    he could offer help to reduce punishment.

    Hayal said he had been introduced to the 40-45-year-old man whom he
    identified as Ýhsan or Ýsmail Kasap. These reports were followed by a
    statement from the MÝT, which criticized leakage of such allegations
    to the press and dismissed employing any personnel named Ýhsan or
    Ýsmail Kasap.

    The murder also deepened divisions among political parties, with
    opposition lashing out at the government for allowing and encouraging
    "infiltration of religious sectarian elements" into the police and
    demanding dismissal of both Ýstanbul Police Chief Cerrah and Interior
    Minister Abdulkadir Aksu for handling of the murder probe.

    The government appeared to be linking the murder with shadowy "deep
    state," a move which opposition Republican People's Party (CHP)
    dismissed as "empty talk."

    The fallout from the Dink murder was perhaps greatest on the Grand
    Unity Party (BBP). Chairman Muhsin Yazýcýoðlu angrily vowed to seek
    court action against the press for accusing his party of links with
    the murder after they discovered a photo showing him and other members
    of his party with Erhan Tuncel.

    --Boundary_(ID_a/Xy/21hePQ5FjYlxEFaGg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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