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ANKARA: Top Trabzon officials suspended after Dink killing

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  • ANKARA: Top Trabzon officials suspended after Dink killing

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    Jan 27 2007


    Top Trabzon officials suspended after Dink killing

    The New Anatolian / Ankara
    27 January 2007


    The governor and police chief of the northern province of Trabzon
    have been recalled to the capital, a week after the shocking murder
    of Armenian origin Turkish journalist Hrant Dink.

    The city has now been shaken by two murder cases, with Italian
    Catholic Priest Andrea Santoro killed by a reportedly mentally
    unbalanced teenager last year, and journalist Dink slain in Istanbul
    by yet another Trabzon teen.

    Hours after the Interior Ministry launched an investigation into the
    administrative and security personnel of the city, following claims
    of a security lapses following Dink's murder, Police Chief Resat
    Altay and Governor Huseyin Yavuzdemir were called back to Ankara for
    reassignment.

    The ministry said in a written statement that two chief inspectors
    were assigned to investigate the recent developments in the city
    following the killing. It also added that the primary mission of the
    inspectors is to find out whether the city's security and
    administrative heads neglected their duty in incidents and
    demonstrations in the aftermath of the murder.

    On Thursday it was reported that the gendarmerie asked the public not
    to talk to people introducing themselves as secret service personnel
    while questioning passers-by about the killer Ogun Samast and other
    suspects.

    A recently revealed intelligence report also said that certain
    foreign circles had tried to establish youth gangs in the city that
    resembled the gang allegedly founded by Yasin Hayal, reportedly the
    second man behind the journalist's murder.

    A photo of Samast published by several dailies along with claims that
    it was made available by the Trabzon gendarmerie has also fueled
    concerns, as both the gendarmerie and police say they haven't taken
    photos of Samast since his detention.


    Third man detained

    Also on Friday, Erhan Tuncel, allegedly the third man behind the
    killing, who in his initial testimony to police confessed to ordering
    Hayal to found a gang and provide firearms training as well as
    ideological indoctrination, was charged by the 11th Istanbul Heavy
    Criminal Court. Tuncel reportedly exercised his right to remain
    silent.

    The total number of suspects reached six with the latest arrest.

    Tuncel was seen behind Muhsin Yazicioglu, the leader of the
    ultranationalist Grand Unity Party (BBP), in a newly released photo,
    reinforcing speculation that the three suspects and unknown others
    had been used by ultranationalist circles.

    However Yazicioglu denied allegations of links to the suspect, saying
    that he cannot know who is standing behind him everywhere. Reports
    have claimed that all suspects were once members of an extremist
    youth organization affiliated with the party.

    Hayal, who was convicted for a bombing outside a McDonald's
    restaurant in Trabzon in 2004, told police that he was given bomb
    training by Chechen militants in Azerbaijan, a country where a
    notorious ex-army officer allegedly founded anti-Armenian assassin
    groups.

    The ex-general, Veli Kucuk, was also alleged to have threatened Dink
    and sent his men to the journalist's hearings. Dink's prosecutor,
    ultranationalist lawyer Kemal Kerincsiz, is also said to be a close
    figure to the former army member.

    Bomb outside Parliament walls raises fears

    Acting on a tip-off, police defused a bomb in a package found near
    the outer walls of the grounds behind Parliament on Friday.

    The package also contained a letter, signed by Turkish Revenge
    Brigade, calling for Hayal and Samast be released.

    "Set free our brothers Yasin and Ogun," said the letter, which also
    protested demonstrations during Dink's funeral ceremony.

    The note resembled many others including those from political parties
    that protested the banners, "We're all Armenians, we're all Hrant."
    Even an unrelated civil group, the Association for Protection and
    Evaluation of Natural Resources (EVDK) said, "We're all Mehmed, tens
    of thousands marched for an Armenian, we lose thousands of soldiers
    each year; who marched to protest the losses?"

    The threatening messages were also posted on the message board of a
    website belonging to a local football club where both Hayal and
    Samast was players for days after Samast was detained by police.

    Those who posted the messages, apparently members of the football
    club, called Hayal "the bomber," and expressed their hatred for Dink
    while praising what Samast did.

    The brigade became a high-profile yet mysterious illegal group when
    it tried in 1998 to assassinate former Human Rights Association (IHD)
    head Akin Birdal. The group last year claimed responsibility for a
    number of bombings in southeastern Diyarbakir. A note on its website
    read that they will kill 100 Kurds for every Turk killed.

    Bomb causes minor damage in Samsun

    Also on Friday, a bomb explosion at the entrance of a business center
    in the northern province of Samsun, although it caused minor damage,
    alerted police for further investigation.

    Dink's killer was apprehended at a bus terminal in Samsun, which
    neighbors his hometown Trabzon, over the weekend.

    The bomb was placed outside the Sengun Business Center where several
    shops and non-governmental organizations are located.

    The bomb went off around 2:15 a.m., shattering windows of the
    building and damaging parked cars.

    Police said a pipe bomb was responsible for the explosion.
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