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Turkey probes ultranationalists in journalist murder

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  • Turkey probes ultranationalists in journalist murder

    Middle East Times, Egypt
    Jan 22 2007

    Turkey probes ultranationalists in journalist murder


    January 22, 2007


    Photo: MURDER SUSPECT: Ogun Samast (L), the suspected killer of
    prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, is escorted by an
    officer as he leaves the police headquarters in Samsun, late January
    20.
    (REUTERS)


    ISTANBUL -- Turkish police Monday focused their investigation into
    the murder of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink on alleged links
    between the prime suspect and an ultranationalist group.

    "We are looking into the political aspect of the murder and possible
    links with illegal organizations," Istanbul police chief Celalettin
    Cerrah told the Anatolia news agency. "The suspect was influenced by
    news articles he read" about Dink, he added.

    A prosecutor said Sunday that the suspect, 17-year-old Ogun Samast,
    had confessed to Friday's murder and newspapers quoted the teenager
    as telling police that he shot Dink because the journalist insulted
    the Turkish nation.

    Dink, 52, was a taboo-breaking critic of the official line on the
    1915-17 Ottoman Empire massacre of Armenians, which he labeled as
    genocide, and was given a suspended six-month jail sentence last year
    for "insulting Turkishness."

    Nationalists branded him a "traitor" and Dink wrote in recent
    articles in his weekly newspaper Agos that he had received threats.

    Quoting sources close to the investigation, newspapers Monday said
    that police were probing links between Samast and a small,
    ultranationalist group in his hometown, Trabzon, on the Black Sea
    Coast.

    Samast told police that he was told to kill Dink by a friend, Yasin
    Hayal, who spent 11 months in jail for a 2004 bomb attack against a
    McDonald's restaurant in Trabzon.

    "Yasin told me to shoot Dink. He gave me the gun. So I did," the
    mass-circulation Hurriyet newspaper quoted the teenager as saying.

    Turkish newspapers described Hayal, who is also in police custody, as
    an "older brother" figure who frequently met youngsters in the area
    and influenced them with his ultranationalist views.

    Hurriyet said that Samast, an unemployed secondary school graduate,
    was among 10 youths aged 15 to 17 whom Hayal had last year trained to
    handle and shoot small arms in order to assassinate Dink.

    "I was chosen because I was the best shot and the fastest runner,"
    the daily Vatan quoted Samast as telling police.

    Friends described Samast, who played football for an amateur team in
    Trabzon, as an introvert who frequented Internet cafes but who was
    also aggressive.

    His mother, Havva Samast, said Monday that she believed that her son
    was a mere tool.

    "He is not a person who could do this on his own," she said in
    remarks broadcast on the NTV news channel. "Someone used him."

    Apart from Samast and Hayal, police are questioning six other
    suspects in connection with the killing.

    Police conducted a re-enactment under heavy security of the murder
    with Samast late Sunday, which saw passers-by booing the teenager and
    calling him a "disgrace."

    Showing no remorse, Samast reportedly told police that he first tried
    to meet Dink in his office but was not allowed in by suspicious
    staff.

    He said that he waited in the street until Dink returned from a
    nearby bank.

    "I approached him from behind and fired shot after shot," Samast was
    quoted by the liberal Vatan newspaper as saying.

    Dink died instantly after being shot three times in the head and
    neck.

    Samast's testimony turned the spotlight on Trabzon, a Black Sea port
    of 1 million and a hot-bed of nationalism, which hit the headlines in
    February 2006 with the murder of an Italian Catholic priest by a
    16-year-old boy.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Sunday that police
    would look into possible links between Dink's killing and that of the
    priest.

    Dink had gained respect in Turkey as a sincere activist for
    Turkish-Armenian reconciliation and for free speech; he also
    denounced Armenian radicalism and, most recently, branded as "idiocy"
    a French bill making the denial of an Armenian "genocide" a jailable
    offense.

    Dink will be buried Tuesday at an Armenian cemetery in Istanbul after
    a ceremony in front of the Agos offices and a religious service at
    the Armenian patriarchate.

    A Turkish diplomat said Monday that Ankara had invited prominent
    Armenian religious leaders from around the world to attend the
    funeral.

    Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern Diocese of the
    Armenian Church of America, has already arrived in Istanbul, Anatolia
    reported. (AFP)
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