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A wider involvement in Hrant Dink's assassination is suspected

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  • A wider involvement in Hrant Dink's assassination is suspected

    A wider involvement in Hrant Dink's assassination is suspected
    By Sebnem Arsu Published: January 22, 2007

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Jan 22 2007

    ISTANBUL: Ogun Samast, the 17-year- old who was arrested in connection
    with the slaying of a leading Turkish journalist, probably would never
    have imagined setting foot on a private plane in his life before he
    was flown to Istanbul early Sunday to be charged.

    Described as a quiet but courageous boy by his uncle, Faik Samast,
    the youth dropped out of secondary school before graduation. He was
    unemployed and came from a lower-middle-class family from Trabzon,
    a Black Sea port.

    Why he would want to kill Hrant Dink, an internationally respected
    intellectual, remains unclear, since Samast had no obvious ties to
    militant organizations. People who know him have speculated that he
    was put up to the assassination by others who took advantage of his
    young age.

    Named after the Turkish soccer star Ogun Temizkanoglu, the young
    Samast aspired to become a soccer player but failed after managers
    of the Yenipelitlispor club, listed in the second amateurs' league,
    expelled him from the team in 2005 because of his undisciplined
    behavior, newspapers wrote.

    "His father hoped that soccer could make his son more disciplined,"
    Hayri Kuk, a team official told NTV. "He refused to accept defeat,
    but at the same was totally open to manipulation. He couldn't have
    done this alone."

    Faik Samast, speaking in an interview on NTV Saturday night, said:
    "He was a very quiet boy. Some people must have exploited him."

    Both Samast's age and origins in Trabzon revived memories about
    the killing last year of Andrea Santaro, a Catholic priest, also in
    Trabzon, by a 16- year-old.

    Kazim Kolcuoglu, head of the Istanbul Bar Association, said that
    young people are sometimes used as assassins because they face lower
    penalties than adults convicted of the same crime.

    In addition to Samast, six other men have been detained as suspected
    collaborators in the killing, and the police are working to decipher
    the links between them.

    One of the suspects, Yasin Hayal, who served 11 months in jail for the
    bombing of a McDonald's restaurant in Trabzon in 2004, is suspected
    of masterminding the attacks on both Dink and Santaro, according to
    the police.

    Although early reports suggested that Samast was affiliated with
    an ultranationalist group called Nizam-i Alem, or World Order, the
    Istanbul head prosecutor said the teenager had no ties with any known
    militant organization.

    The center-right newspaper Vatan reported that the teenager had
    visited Istanbul five times in 15 days and was accompanied by two
    people in his last trip a few days ago.

    Hurriyet, another center-right paper, quoted his family as saying
    that Ogun brought lots of cash from Istanbul after a trip there more
    than a week ago.

    Dressed in the same jeans jacket, dark leather shoes and white beret
    that he was seen wearing in a surveillance camera video taken just
    before the shooting Friday in the Sisli district of Istanbul, Samast
    was arrested on a passenger bus as it was leaving the town of Samsun
    on the way back to his hometown. A nationwide manhunt for the youth
    had begun when the boy's father identified his son as the person in
    the video.

    Samast confessed to the killing shortly after his arrest, Samsun's
    chief prosecutor, Ahmet Gokcinar, told the state-run Anatolian
    news agency.

    He was quoted by the semiofficial AA news agency that after he
    was unable to meet with Dink at the newspaper, he "went to Friday
    prayers. After prayers, I went to the newspaper. At that moment,
    Hrant Dink went into a bank. After the bank he went back to the
    newspaper. He got startled when he saw me. Ten minutes later, he
    left the newspaper. I approached him from behind and shot him from
    one meter away. I'm not sorry."

    NTV television quoted unnamed sources saying that he had expressed
    no regrets about what he had done.

    As a 17-year-old, Samast will be interrogated by a public prosecutor
    instead of the police, and will be tried at a minors' court, which
    could serve to lessen any prison term.
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