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ANKARA: Profile of Hrant Dink's Juvenile Murder Suspect

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  • ANKARA: Profile of Hrant Dink's Juvenile Murder Suspect

    Turkish Daily News
    Jan 22 2007

    Profile of Hrant Dink's Juvenile Murder Suspect
    Monday, January 22, 2007

    ÞAFAK TÝMUR
    ISTANBUL - Turkish Daily News

    A 17-year-old described by friends as combative and by his family as
    impressionable was arrested Saturday in the Black Sea city of Samsun
    for the murder a day earlier of journalist Hrant Dink.

    Ogun Samast, a resident of Trabzon, reportedly confessed to the
    killing shortly after his arrest, allegedly on his way home by bus
    after gunning down the famed Armenian-Turkish newspaper editor on an
    Istanbul street mid-day Friday.

    "I don't regret it. I would do it again," the youth was quoted as
    saying during his preliminary interrogation in Samsun, according
    Chief Prosecutor Ahmet Gokcinar.

    As Samast was transported to Istanbul over the weekend, a round-up of
    other suspects continued in the country amid widespread condemnation,
    protests from Istanbul to the southern province of Hatay. As of
    Sunday evening, a total 12 others suspected of complicity had been
    arrested in Istanbul and Trabzon. The youth's ties to Trabzon also
    focused attention on the city's reputation as center for anti-western
    feeling. Catholic priest Andrea Santoro was slain there in February
    of last year, also by a juvenile.

    The Internet was an influence in his decision to attack Dink, Samast
    told police during his first interrogation in Istanbul, according to
    the Anatolian News Agency and other reports.

    "I read on the Internet that [Dink] said 'I am from Turkey but Turkish
    blood is dirty' and I decided to kill him ...I do not regret this,"
    CNN Turk quoted Samast as saying.

    Samast's jailhouse talk of the Internet turned attention to various
    nationalist web sites, many containing expressions of joy in various
    forums. One post read: "Thanks to whoever has given the order and
    thanks to whoever has pulled the trigger." Another statement from
    the forum said, "The best news ever."

    "Why is terrorist training free on the internet?" asked journalist
    Mustafa Mutlu in a Sunday column in the mass daily Vatan. He
    described how much information is on the internet which can be used
    for terrorist attacks.

    In the aftermath of the killing which topped the news of every
    newspaper and television broadcast over the weekend, many decried
    the Internet as a source of dissemination of the hatred behind the
    killing of Dink, a native of Malatya who was 53.

    Much television commentary and debate also turned on the fact no
    protection was provided for Dink, despite a barrage of death threats
    before and after his suspended conviction last year for "insulting
    Turkishness" under the infamous Article 301 of the Turkish penal
    code. Security officials, including Istanbul Governor Muammer Guler,
    responded that Dink rejected offers of security.Owners of the series of
    small shops that surround Dink's newspaper, Agos, quarreled with that
    account, however. One shop owner told the TDN that a plainclothes
    surveillance policeman generally kept an eye on the door of the
    newspaper but was absent on Friday. His absence may have let other
    regulars in the neighborhood to dismiss Samast's loitering presence
    in front of the newspaper Friday as a change in the guard.

    The quick arrested was credited in the media to the aid of the
    youngster's father, Ahmet Samast, who reportedly identified his son
    from the broadcast of CCTV footage capturing the fleeing gunman and
    alerted policec

    Among suspects under continued questioning in Istanbul, one, Yasin
    Hayal, served 11 months in jail for bombing a McDonald's restaurant
    in Trabzon in 2004, Vatan reported. Investigators drew a think line
    between Trabzon and Istanbul in their early reconstruction of the
    killing and its planning.

    "The murder was planned in Trabzon and carried out in Istanbul.

    Everybody who helped with this has been identified," Trabzon Governor
    Huseyin Yavuzdemir said.Various description of Samast emerged over the
    weekend, family described him as a boy who was calm and withdrawn but
    friends said he could be aggressive and contentious. Samast family
    neighbors in the town of Peletli neighboring Trabzon said the youth
    was a combative teenager and was kicked off the town football team
    because of his aggression. Having left high school, the unemployed
    teenager spent a great amount of time on the Internet. "It is a
    disaster to have a son in Trabzon," said Nihat Genc, a journalist
    and a native of Trabzon in a phone interview with the Turkish Daily
    News. The combination of high unemployment and a large and energetic
    young population is a lethal brew, he said. Frustrated youth become
    hard to control and "they will leave Trabzon sooner or later, like a
    destiny."While neighbors told the NTV news network that Samast was
    not overtly political, no more or less nationalist than his peers,
    the profile of others arrested pointed to ultra-nationlist ties. His
    suspected co-conspirator Hayal, convicted the McDonald's bomb attack,
    is accused, according to reports of Samast's statements to police,
    of enlisting him kill Dink. Hayal had managed a tea house of the
    Nationalist Movement Party's (MHP) Peletli branch. MHP is known for its
    ultra-nationalist leanings.The party's deputy president, Ali Iþýklar,
    accused foreign powers of the murder of Dink: "There are foreign powers
    behind this murder;" said Iþýklar in his statement about the murder,
    the Anatolia agency reported. Iþýklar argued that changing Turkey's
    political agenda was the motive behind Dink's murder.

    Media reports also speculated that Samast was a member of the
    youth wing of the radical nationalist Great Union Party (BBP). The
    party's chief, however, rejected the allegation: "Our colleagues
    said that they do not know such a person and he does not have any
    connections with the organization," said Muhsin Yazýcýoðlu the Doðan
    New Agency reported. People that knew Samast stressed that he was an
    impressionable and easily influenced young man. Hayri Kuk, coach of
    the local football team from which Samast was dismissed, said that
    Samast's character was vulnerable to persuasion. He added that Samast
    could not have acted alone and done something so critical.Samast's
    uncle Faik Samast also claimed that people could have exploited
    his nephew. Samast was a brave teenager, his uncle said in a phone
    interview with CNNTurk. He also said that Samast was having quarrels
    at home recently because of money. Faik Samast argued that his nephew
    could be deceived for money. Drugs may have played a role. Þevket
    Arz, a Trabzon parliamentarian told the TDN, that allegations that
    Samast was a narcotics abuser were confirmed by the Trabzon governor's
    office.The surname Samast takes its roots from a branch of Oðuz tribe
    that is believed to be the ancestors of Central Asian Turks. The
    clan Cepniler known by their roles in the Turkish transformation of
    eastern Black Sea region in north Anatolia that families carrying the
    surname Samast generally live in Tarbzon, Istanbul, Bursa, Tekirdað
    and Ankara, reported the private news agency ANKA. Sunday morning at
    the Armenian Patriarchy, Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II, was hoped to
    preside and speak about the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink. The Patriarch did not attend the Mass. No explanation
    for his absence was given. Around 400 Armenians attended the Mass. At
    the Mass, a representative of Hrant Dink's newspaper Agos said that
    no Agos employee would give a statement until Tuesday. Also present
    at the Mass were representatives from Armenian TV.

    There was no mention of Hrant Dink during the Mass, though passages
    from the Bible were read, that evoked the idea of an innocent victim
    dying for others benefit. BOXEven the clues were on him

    The alleged murderer of journalist Hrant Dink, Ogun Samast, was
    caught by police on the way back to his hometown, Trabzon. Samast,
    a 17-year old youth, carried the gun and wore the infamous white beret

    ISTANBUL - with wire dispatchesPrime Minister Tayyip Erdoðan announced
    late Saturday that the suspected murderer of journalist Hrant Dink
    was captured in Samsun, a city at the Black Sea region, at 11 p.m.

    Ogun Samast, a 17-year old who later confessed to the murder, was
    brought to Istanbul by a private plane at 4.50 a.m. After being
    medically examined, he was taken to the Ýstanbul Police Department,
    reported the Anatolia news agency.

    A shortwhile after the capture, PM Erdoðan made an announcement,
    broadcasted live on television channels. "The suspect of the Hrant
    Dink murder, Ogun Samast, is captured in Samsun," he said. "The gun
    used at the murder was also found with him. The white beret, claimed
    to be worn by the suspect at the time of the murder was on his head
    ... The suspect's being snatched before Tuesday (the day of Dink's
    funeral) is a cause for delight. The investigation will be carried
    on with the same firmness."

    10 suspects under custody: Four of the ten people who were held
    in custody in Trabzon were also brought to Ýstanbul by a scheduled
    flight yesterday morning, while Samast's father, mother and sister
    were released. Another 3 were taken under police custody in Trabzon
    yesterday. While the TDN was going to print, there were a total of
    10 suspects under custody related to the murder.

    As the suspect had not reached lawful age, Governor of Istanbul,
    Muammer Guler, said that police are following questioning techniques
    for the underaged.

    Attorney General of Istanbul, Cengiz Engin, told journalists that the
    investigation will be carried forward by a police unit specialized
    in organized crimes.

    According to CNN Turk news channel, Ogun Samast said "I shot him
    after Friday prayers and I am not regretful," right after he was taken
    under custody by the Samsun Police Department. "I have read about him
    on the internet. I decided to kill him because he had said he was a
    Turkish citizen, but that Turkish blood was dirty," Samast continued.

    The young suspect was turned in by his father. According to news
    reports, the father, Ahmet Samast, saw the CCTV images on television
    and immediately called the Trabzon Police Department, saying "This
    is my son." Samast said his son left for Ýstanbul three days ago and
    no news had arrived from him since then.

    --Boundary_(ID_RlSnx4gMFKvqDcTwOvezsQ)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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