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Sixth suspect jailed, top officials removed over journalist's murder

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  • Sixth suspect jailed, top officials removed over journalist's murder

    Agence France Presse -- English
    January 26, 2007 Friday


    Sixth suspect jailed, top officials removed over journalist's murder



    A sixth suspect was jailed and two senior regional officials were
    removed from office Friday as Turkish authorities expanded their
    investigation into the murder of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink.

    A court in Istanbul charged university student Erhan Tuncel with
    instigating the murder, bringing to six the number of suspects held
    over the January 19 killing, the Anatolia news agency reported.

    Tuncel, who was close to an ultra-nationalist group, allegedly
    agitated young people in the northern city of Trabzon, where the
    suspected assailant, 17-year-old Ogun Samast, comes from.

    The government meanwhile removed the governor and the police chief of
    Trabzon from their positions, an interior ministry spokeswoman told
    AFP.

    The city, a nationalist stronghold, has come under the spotlight with
    a series of violent incidents, including the murder of an Italian
    Catholic priest and the near lynching of five leftist activists
    mistaken for Kurdish separatists last year.

    Critics say the Trabzon authorities failed to investigate seriously
    the groups of rogue youths under the sway of local nationalist and
    anti-Christian hardliners following the murder of Father Andrea
    Santoro, who was gunned down last February by a 16-year-old boy while
    praying in his church.

    On Wednesday Samast, a jobless secondary school graduate, and four
    other suspects were charged in connection with Dink's murder and
    jailed pending trial.

    A second suspect who appeared before court on Friday -- a teenager
    who allegedly sent an e-mail to Samast congratulating him for Dink's
    murder -- was released.

    The investigation so far has suggested that the suspects, all of them
    young people, did not belong to any known underground organisation
    but wanted to take action on their own against what they saw as
    rising threats to Turkey's unity.

    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 urging 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".

    One of the key suspects jailed Wednesday, Yasin Hayal, 26, is
    believed to have frequently met with Tuncel and allegedly gave Samast
    money and a gun to kill Dink.

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

    The interior ministry announced Friday that it was also sending two
    senior inspectors to Trabzon to investigate whether the city's
    administrators and security forces were responsible for "any faults
    or negligence" in the string of violent incidents there.

    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, a candidate for EU membership, and the
    government has come under fire for failing to protect free speech.

    Despite the controversies, Dink had 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."
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