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ANKARA: Bar asks who threatened Dink at Istanbul dep gov office

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  • ANKARA: Bar asks who threatened Dink at Istanbul dep gov office

    New Anatolian, Turkey
    Jan 26 2007

    Ankara Bar asks who threatened Dink at Istanbul deputy governor's
    office

    Burak Esen - The New Anatolian / Ankara
    26 January 2007


    After days of rallies and tears, as interest in Hrant Dink's killing
    fades to join a long list of political murders, the Ankara Bar
    yesterday made an attempt to keep the issue alive, at least for a
    short while longer.

    The bar asked the Interior Ministry to launch a disciplinary and
    criminal investigation into an Istanbul deputy governor and two
    people with him who allegedly threatened the late Armenian-origin
    Turkish journalist, basing this request on a column by Dink telling
    of this incident in the deputy governor's office.

    Dink, in his Jan. 12 column "Why was I chosen as a target?" in his
    bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, claimed that he was
    threatened by two unknown "relatives" of the deputy governor over one
    of his news articles.

    The claims were also touched upon by a close friend of Dink following
    his murder last Friday. Aydin Engin stated that some time ago an
    Istanbul deputy governor called and extended an invitation to Dink.
    "When Dink got there, no one paid attention to him," said Ergin.
    "There were two people with the deputy governor. He introduced them
    to Dink as his friends. Afterwards, one of the two, a man, spoke at
    length and said that there are all sorts of people on the streets and
    that something bad could happen to him."

    Engin added that Dink mentioned the event in his application to the
    European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).

    Dink wrote in his column that he was invited to the office of an
    Istanbul deputy governor and to bring documents about a news story,
    but only after he reminded them about the documents did they remember
    that they had called him to discuss them.

    The documents were about a news story claiming that Ataturk's adopted
    daughter Sabiha Gokcen, Turkey's first female Turkish pilot, was an
    ethnic Armenian, and Istanbul Governor Muammer Guler, in a statement
    in defense of his deputy, said that the news had disturbed the
    Turkish people.

    Guler also said that Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II Mutafyan was
    subjected to death threats after the story, which, he remarked, may
    have prompted the deputy governor to tell Dink of the unwanted
    consequences of his news.

    Guler also said, as quoted in the petition, that while the police and
    the governor's office were discussing security measures to protect
    Mesrob II, an official responsible for security called Dink to
    exchange information with him about threats against the patriarch.

    However the governor revealed neither the name of the deputy governor
    or the position of people with him during the meeting.

    Dink, who explained the reason for the invitation as to examine
    documents about the story, also said in his column that both the
    deputy governor and the unknown male at the meeting respectively told
    him that he was an experienced journalist and that he should write
    more carefully.

    "Although we're sure that you have no bad intentions, you may face a
    public backlash as not everyone interprets your articles the way we
    do," Dink quoted the unknown guest as saying.

    The bar's petition, which asked about the relationship of the two
    people to the deputy governor and whether they are public servants,
    was given to the ministry by lawyer Kemal Vuraldogan yesterday.

    The details the lawyer sought from the ministry on behalf of the
    Ankara Bar are as follows:

    - Whether the deputy governor has the authority to invite Dink to
    discuss documents about a news article he wrote.
    - Why the documents brought along by the journalist weren't examined.
    - Whether the two people who attended the meeting are public
    servants, and if so, which institutions they work for.
    - Why the deputy governor introduced the two as his relatives if
    these people were actually public servants and if this could be
    considered unethical.
    - Under what authority the deputy governor met with Dink, while two
    other people accompanied him
    - Why the deputy governor failed to record the minutes of the
    meeting.
    - Why Dink was informed about threats against Mesrob II rather than
    Mutafyan himself.
    - Whether the deputy governor or the two people threatened Dink.
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