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Two more suspects in court over journalist's murder: report

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  • Two more suspects in court over journalist's murder: report

    Agence France Presse -- English
    January 26, 2007 Friday


    Two more suspects in court over journalist's murder: report


    Two more people suspected of involvement in the killing of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink were brought to court here
    Friday to face possible charges, the Anatolia news agency reported.

    One of them, Erhan Tuncel, is a university student close to an
    ultra-nationalist group who reportedly agitated young people in the
    northern city of Trabzon, where the suspected assailant, 17-year-old
    Ogun Samast, comes from.

    The second person who was to appear before court allegedly sent an
    e-mail to Samast, congratulating him for Dink's murder.

    Samast, a jobless secondary school graduate, and four other suspects
    were charged over Dink's January 19 shooting in Istanbul and jailed
    pending trial on Wednesday.

    One of the accused, Yasin Hayal, 26, is believed to have frequently
    met with Tuncel and allegedly instigated Samast to kill Dink, giving
    him money and the gun.

    Hayal served 11 months in jail over a 2004 bomb blast outside a
    McDonald's restaurant in Trabzon.

    The investigation so far has suggested that the suspects, most of
    them from Trabzon, did not belong to any known underground
    organisation and wanted to take the matter in their own hands against
    what they believed to be rising threats to Turkey's unity.

    Trabzon, a nationalist stronghold, has come under the media spotlight
    with a series of violent incidents, including the shooting of a Roman
    Catholic priest by a 16-year-old boy last year.

    Dink, editor of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos and one of
    Turkey's most prominent ethnic Armenians, was branded a "traitor" by
    nationalists for calling for on open debate on the massacres of
    Armenians under the Ottoman Empire -- a taboo topic until recently --
    which he labeled as genocide.

    He was last year given a six-month suspended sentence for insulting
    "Turkishness."

    But Dink also won respect as a sincere campaigner for
    Turkish-Armenian reconciliation and was critical of Armenian
    fanaticism.

    Some 100,000 protestors marched at his funeral Tuesday in one of the
    largest public gatherings in Istanbul in recent years, brandishing
    banners that read "We are all Armenians."

    The murder of Dink, shot three times from behind outside the Agos
    office in downtown Istanbul, has sparked a heated debate over rising
    nationalism in Turkey.
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