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More Turks Interrogated In Dink Murder Probe

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  • More Turks Interrogated In Dink Murder Probe

    MORE TURKS INTERROGATED IN DINK MURDER PROBE

    AP
    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Feb 26 2007

    Turkish prosecutors on Monday interrogated two new suspects in the
    killing of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who were detained
    over the weekend.

    Police detained the two on Saturday in Trabzon, the Black Sea port
    city where all eight other suspects, including the alleged teenage
    triggerman, lived. Police, meanwhile, released another suspect in
    Istanbul following his interrogation over the weekend, the state-run
    Anatolia news agency reported Monday.

    Last month's killing of Dink in Istanbul prompted international
    condemnation as well as debate within Turkey about free speech, and
    whether state institutions were tolerant of militant nationalists. On
    Friday, a group of activists invited prosecutors to press charges
    against them in a protest against a law that restricts free speech
    and has been used to prosecute intellectuals.

    Five members of the small Powerful Turkey Party stood in front
    of a prosecutor at a courthouse and repeated statements by Nobel
    Prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk, slain journalist Dink and other
    intellectuals that were used as evidence to prosecute them under
    Article 301 of Turkey's penal code, which bans insults to Turkish
    identity.

    The group, including party leader Tuna Bekleyic, then asked the
    prosecutor to file charges against them. Prosecutors would have to
    investigate Bekleyic and his friends before opening any lawsuit,
    and none of the activists were arrested. More members of the party,
    which has just a few thousand adherents in a country of 70 million,
    were expected to conduct a similar act of civil disobedience this week.

    Article 301 makes denigrating Turkish identity a crime punishable by
    up to three years in prison. Pamuk and Dink had both spoken out about
    the mass killings of Armenians by Turks in the early 20th century,
    an issue that remains sensitive today. Numerous other writers,
    journalists and academics have also been prosecuted.
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