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Dink's Family Files Complaint In Court

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  • Dink's Family Files Complaint In Court

    DINK'S FAMILY FILES COMPLAINT IN COURT

    ASBAREZ
    2/14/2007

    ISTANBUL (Combined Sources)--Slain journalist Hrant Dink's widow
    Rachel, his three children and his brother Orhan filed a complaint
    in municipal court against those officials who were informed of the
    death threats against his life but did not act to prevent his murder.

    In the complaint, the family insisted that authorities had failed to
    protect the journalist's life and sought unspecified damages.

    They have also identified Erhan Tuncel, one of the suspects arrested
    in the case. He was later discovered to be a police informant, but
    has remained silent since the Jan. 19 murder.

    A man suspected of having sent an e-mail death threat to the Agos
    weekly newspaper offices was held briefly by the police in the central
    town of Kayseri Monday, Turkish news agencies reported.

    The police captured an individual who allegedly sent electronic
    messages to the bilingual Agos daily. It was not immediately clear
    whether his messages were sent before or after Dink's killing. The man,
    whose name was not identified, was released after being questioned
    by police, authorities said.

    The personal computer belonging to the alleged culprit was seized by
    the police for further investigation.

    "The suspect's testimony was relayed to the Prosecutor's Office
    because this is a very sensitive issue in Kayseri, where we have
    an Armenian church. We don't want to allow anything bad to happen,"
    the city's police chief, Orhan Ozdemir, told the Dogan News Agency.

    In other news, speculation has been rife here that Orhan Pamuk, the
    winner of the 2006 Nobel Literature Prize, has fled the country over
    security concerns ever since he left for New York last month to teach
    at Columbia University, where he is a fellow. Pamuk has chosen to
    remain silent over his departure which came two weeks after Dink was
    gunned down outside the offices of his weekly newspaper in Istanbul
    by a 17-year-old suspected nationalist.

    The novelist's close friends and publishers in Turkey deny claims that
    he has fled or gone into a temporary exile after receiving threats,
    similar to those sent to Dink before his killing. "He did not escape
    from Turkey, there was nothing extraordinary in his departure and he
    will be back," a close colleague said on condition of anonymity.

    The case was dropped on a technicality but turned Pamuk into a
    "traitor" for ultra-nationalists. One of the eight men charged over
    Dink's murder warned Pamuk to watch out and "come to his senses" while
    he was being brought to court last month. Pamuk is among more than
    a dozen intellectuals and journalists who were assigned bodyguards
    not long after Dink's murder.

    Another one is Baskin Oran, a professor of political sciences and
    author of a controversial government-sponsored report in 2004 which
    made radical recommendations to the government to improve the rights
    of the restive Kurdish community and non-Muslim minorities. The report
    was branded treasonous by nationalists, disowned by the government
    and led to Oran facing charges of insulting the Turkish judiciary of
    which he was acquitted.

    Oran, who has been receiving threats since then, wrote in a recent
    newspaper column that there was a "culture of lynching" in Turkey and
    argued that the state had to protect its citizens without waiting for
    them to request protection. "Did I ask for protection? No. I do not
    demand it, it is the state's principal duty," said the academician
    who recently filed a complaint over the threats he received.

    "The prosecutor summoned me and asked whether it would be possible
    for me to reconcile with those who threaten me. I said no," he wrote.

    Erol Onderoglu, the representative in Istanbul of media rights
    watchdog Reporters Without Borders, said that police, already under
    fire for their handling of the Dink case, finally assigned protection
    to intellectuals so as not to face any more embarrassment. Turkish
    newspapers have accused police of receiving intelligence last year of
    a plot to kill Dink, but failing to act on it, while a video leaked
    to the media two weeks ago showed security forces posing with Dink's
    alleged assailant for "souvenir pictures" shortly after his capture.

    "When police are able to put thousands of officers on duty at football
    matches, could they not also assign bodyguards to these intellectuals,"
    said Onderoglu, who described the threats against intellectuals not
    as isolated acts but an organized campaign.

    Since Dink's killing, a group of 10 non-governmental organizations
    have presented a proposal to amend the penal code article -- under
    which Dink was convicted -- in order to limit its scope and boost
    freedom of expression.

    Facing both presidential and general elections this year amid a rising
    wave of nationalism, the government has yet to give its view on the
    proposal to change the article.
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