Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ankara; Dink's Murder Trial Starts

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ankara; Dink's Murder Trial Starts

    DINK'S MURDER TRIAL STARTS

    Turkish Daily News , Turkey
    ISTANBUL - TDN with wire dispatches
    July 2 2007

    The first hearing of the 18 defendants in the murder case of the
    Armenian Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, assassinated in Istanbul in
    January, starts today at Istanbul High Criminal Courts in Beºiktaº.

    Many are expected to gather in front of the courthouse to demonstrate
    that the public follows the case closely. The hearing is closed
    to public and media as one of the murder suspects is less than 18
    years' old.

    Dink, an advocate of free speech, whose comments about the mass
    killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in early 20th century
    infuriated hardline nationalists, was shot to death in central Istanbul
    in front of the office of Agos newspaper where Hrant Dink was editor
    in chief. Dink was tried for allegedly violating Article 301 of the
    Turkish penal code, which penalizes 'insulting Turkishnness', in an
    article published last year.

    The police quickly arrested the17-year-old murder suspect. But
    critics accused authorities for ignoring reports about the plot
    to kill Dink. Allegedly all residents in the Black Sea province of
    Trabzon's Pelitli, the hometown of the suspect and his perpetrators,
    knew about the murder plan.

    Dink's trial will prove judicial independency

    ISTANBUL - TDN

    The murder trial of Armenian Turkish journalist Hrant Dink in
    last January will be an exam of judicial independency for Turkey,
    the international human rights association Human Rights Watch
    (HRW) mentioned in a press statement last week. "We will carefully
    follow how the court will handle the evidence pointing at security
    officials," said the HRW Europe and Middle Asia department director
    Holly Cartner. The security officials who had connections with or
    negligence in Dink's murder should be tried, the HRW emphasized. The
    organization also noted it is concerned because before the launch of
    the investigation Istanbul police chief declared the murder was had
    no political connections. "Turkish authorities could not protect
    Dink although it was obvious that his life was in danger," Holly
    Cartner said.

    --Boundary_(ID_W0uKobtWfKXg5F7LPkF5Lw)--
Working...
X