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Editor's killing linked to murder of priest

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  • Editor's killing linked to murder of priest

    Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
    from the New York Times
    Jan 22 2007

    Editor's killing linked to murder of priest

    Sebnem Arsu in Istanbul, Turkey
    January 22, 2007

    TURKISH police have arrested a 17-year-old suspect in the killing of
    a newspaper editor who championed Armenian rights, Turkish
    authorities say.

    The editor, Hrant Dink, 52, a Turk of Armenian descent, was shot on
    Friday afternoon outside the office of his newspaper, Agos. A gunman
    was recorded by a surveillance camera nearby, and the police appealed
    to the public for help in identifying him.

    On Saturday night, Ogun Samast was captured in the Black Sea port of
    Samsun after his father recognised him from the video and notified
    police in Trabzon, their home town, said the Governor of Istanbul
    province, Muammer Guler.

    "The suspect was captured in Samsun on a passenger bus destined to
    Trabzon, together with all the evidence, including his gun and the
    white beret" seen in the video, Mr Guler said.

    Samast, an unemployed high school leaver who arrived in Istanbul a
    week ago, admitted killing Dink, the Samsun police said.

    The police are also looking into possible links between Samast and
    the killing of a Catholic priest, Andrea Santaro, last February. The
    assailant was a 16-year-old who, like the priest and Samast, was from
    Trabzon.

    The Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, on Saturday praised the
    efforts of the security forces and expressed satisfaction that an
    arrest had been made before Dink's funeral tomorrow. "We're going to
    continue investigations with the same determination," he said,
    stressing that the arrest was only the beginning.

    Guler said at a news conference earlier on Saturday that Samast had
    visited the Agos office on Friday. He apparently posed as a
    university student hoping to meet Dink, whose secretary told the
    young man he would need an appointment.

    The secretary later saw him loitering outside the office before Dink
    was attacked, Mr Guler said.

    Kazim Kolcuoglu, head of the Istanbul Bar Association, noting that
    Samast and the killer of Santaro were under the age of 18, said
    minors in Turkey are used in murders because they face lower
    penalties than an adult convicted of the same crime.

    As a 17-year-old, Samast will be interrogated by a public prosecutor
    instead of the police.

    Dink's murder has shocked Turkey. Mr Erdogan condemned the shooting
    as a direct attack on Turkey's stability. Some analysts saw the
    killing as a politically motivated attack on Turkey's progress toward
    membership in the European Union, while others blamed a controversial
    law under which Dink had been convicted of insulting Turkish national
    identity.

    Dink, who angered many in Turkey by challenging the official Turkish
    version of the 1915 Armenian genocide, was given a six-month
    suspended sentence. But in the eyes of many radical nationalists, it
    made him a target.

    The New York Times
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