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  • Ankara: Turkey: Opening Of The Trial Against The Alleged Murderers O

    TURKEY : OPENING OF THE TRIAL AGAINST THE ALLEGED MURDERERS OF HRANT DINK

    AB Haber, Belgium
    International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH)
    EU-Turkey News Network
    July 1 2007

    Paris, 29 June 2007 - On July 2, 2007, the criminal proceedings against
    the alleged murderers of the Turkish journalist, Hrant Dink will begin
    in Istanbul. Assassinated on a public street in front of its office in
    Istanbul on January 19, 2007, this journalist of Armenian extraction
    was at the forefront of the movement in favour of the democratic
    reforms in Turkey. As an enthusiastic defender of the entry of Turkey
    into the European Union, Dink personified the dialogue between Turks
    and Armenians. FIDH has strongly challenged the Turkish authorities
    to actively seek the assassins and accomplices of this crime and, on
    the occasion of the 36th FIDH Congress, demanded from that the Turkish
    justice system carry out a transparent and thorough survey in order
    to establish all those responsible in the assassination of Hrant Dink.

    Due to the the age of alleged murderer, Ogun Samast, 17 years, the
    proceedings will be held behind closed doors. According to the bill
    of indictment, he will have to respond to numerous charges, including
    "premeditated homicide" and "membership of a terrorist organization".

    The prosecutors in the case seek a sentence ranging between 18 and
    24 years of prison. He faces an additional sentence from 8,5 to
    18 years in prison for membership of a terrorist organization and
    illegal possession of a weapon. The two supposed instigators of the
    assassination, Erhan Tuncel and Yasin Hayal, face life sentences.

    Moreover, the former faces a sentence of between 22,5 and 48 years of
    prison for having directed a terrorist act and the latter, 26 years
    old, is likely to receive an additional sentence from 18 to 30 years of
    prison for the same crimes, in addition to having furnished the money
    and the weapon for the crime. Penalties ranging from 7.5 to 35 years
    of prison are required against the 15 other alleged accomplices, all
    from Trabzon, for complicity in murder and membership in a terrorist
    organization.

    The criminal investigation carried out by two prosecutors and
    the anti-terrorist division of the Istanbul police force revealed
    complicity and negligence within the apparatus of State, in particular
    in the police and gendarmerie. The police force of Trabzon had
    allegedly informed Ankara and Istanbul, as of February 2006, of the
    plans of the terrorist organization to kill Hrant Dink. These warnings
    were not taken seriously. The governor and the chief of the police
    force of Trabzon were transferred, and the chief of the information
    of the police force of Istanbul, Ahmet Ilhan Guler was dismissed from
    his position and is the subject of an investigation .

    The chief of police in Istanbul, Celalettin Cerrah, who had one moment
    denied all "political dimensions or organization behind this crime",
    was the subject of a preliminary investigation which was stopped on
    decision of the governor of Istanbul, who saw no justification for
    such an investigation. The lawyers of Hrant Dink made a call for this
    decision. The procedure is underway.

    Also, an inquest has established ilinks between the terrorist group and
    an ultra-nationalist political organization, the Grand Union Party,
    and its youth movement, 'Foyers Alperen' . The lawyers called for
    the detailed examination of these relations during the proceedings.

    The Turkish media, moreover, clarified that several people have been
    excluded from the framework of the investigations. They revealed that
    two people, one linked to the secret service of the gendarmerie and
    the other with the Trabzon police force, had repeated correspondance
    with the suspects. Tens of telephone contacts with Ogun Samast,
    the principal defendant, were recorded for the period preceding the
    murder. However, only a part of these conversations would have been
    transmitted to the prosecutors in charge of the investigation.

    FIDH recalls that it is essential that the case proceeds under
    conditions of total safety and transparency, making it possible
    for justice to be done in a peaceful manner. FIDH also demands that
    light be shed on all who had direct or indirect responsibility in
    this assassination, and that the true accomplices be identified,
    whomever they are.

    In this light, FIDH reiterates its total support for lawyers of the
    Dink family and places all of its hopes and attention on the ability
    of the Turkish justice system to answer all of the questions raised
    in this crime, in particular the possible implication of the police
    and gendarmerie but also the failure of the government to protect a
    citizen who lived under a notorious threat.
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