Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Five Turks charged in murder of editor

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Five Turks charged in murder of editor

    Five Turks charged in murder of editor

    Dominican Today, Dominican Republic
    Jan 25 2007

    Istanbul.- A Turkish prosecutor has said five people were charged in
    the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, Turkish media
    reported on Thursday.

    Istanbul's chief prosecutor Aykut Cengiz Engin charged Ogun Samast, a
    17-year-old unemployed man from the Black Sea coast, with premeditated
    murder and membership of an armed group.

    Four others were charged with forming an armed organization and
    incitement to murder.

    Samast, who is reported to have been close to an ultranationalist
    group in his home town Trabzon, has admitted to shooting Dink in
    daylight as he left his newspaper Agos in Istanbul last Friday.

    The murder brought 100,000 mourners to Istanbul's streets for Dink's
    funeral on Tuesday and has reignited debate about hardline nationalism
    in a country seeking European Union membership.

    "From the quality and the nature of the crimes attributed to the
    suspects it is clear the result emerges that they formed an armed
    group," Engin told reporters late on Wednesday in comments reported
    by the NTV Web site.

    Engin said the fact that the suspects were remanded in custody did not
    mean that a case would be opened soon. Prosecutors will now prepare
    an indictment against the suspects.

    Samast has confessed to killing Dink for "insulting" Turks in his
    writings and statements on the massacres of Armenians during World
    War One - a highly sensitive issue in Turkey.

    Yasin Hayal, a known nationalist militant, has admitted to inciting
    his friend Samast to kill Dink, the police said.

    Hayal served 11 months in jail for the 2004 bombing of a McDonald's
    restaurant in Trabzon.

    Dink, who worked for reconciliation between Christian Armenians and
    Muslim Turks, had been prosecuted for his views on the massacres of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915.

    He was among intellectuals, including Nobel Literature Prize winner
    Orhan Pamuk, who have been prosecuted under laws restricting freedom
    of expression in Turkey.
Working...
X