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ANKARA: Dink Murder Trial Opens Amidst Protests

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  • ANKARA: Dink Murder Trial Opens Amidst Protests

    DINK MURDER TRIAL OPENS AMIDST PROTESTS
    E. BariÞ AltintaÞ Ýstanbul

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    July 3 2007

    The trial of 18 people charged with involvement in the murder of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink opened on Monday behind closed
    doors, six months after the murder took place in Ýstanbul.

    Eighteen suspects -- including O.S., the 17-year-old who confessed to
    gunning down Dink -- went on trial for the first time yesterday. The
    trial will take place behind closed doors because O.S. is a minor.

    Ultranationalists Erhan Tuncel, a university student, and Hayal,
    who served time for the 2004 bombing of a McDonald's, are charged
    with planning the crime and membership in a terrorist organization.

    The slate of defendants reaches high up into the political
    ranks, including Yaþar Cihan, chairman of a local branch of the
    ultranationalist Grand Unity Party (BBP), who is accused of giving
    money to Hayal after the shooting. During the first day of the hearing,
    Tuncel was reported to have said in his testimony that Hayal was "a
    kid with nothing to do; has done nothing wrong. Has no bad intentions."

    O.S. was reported to have demanded trial by a juvenile court,
    plaintiffs' lawyers informed the press during short breaks they took
    throughout the day. Tuncel and Hayal were also reported to have
    briefly bickered over remarks on each other's psychological state
    during the hearing, according to a press statement from Fahriye Cetin,
    a lawyer representing the Dink family. "O.S. exercised his right to
    keep silent and did not testify," she said in the evening when the
    judge took a pause for 15 minutes.

    Dink's wife, Rakel Dink, in her court testimony blamed the negligence
    of state officials for the assassination and demanded that the court
    punish those responsible, a statement from a civil society organization
    set up specially to monitor the Dink trial said.

    The judges had not yet adjourned yesterday's hearing by the time
    Today's Zaman went to print. Earlier in the morning, approximately a
    thousand protesters gathered in Ýstanbul's Beþiktaþ district, near
    the courthouse, to demand that justice be done. Prominent lawyers,
    artists and journalists joined the protestors appealing for justice
    in front of the courthouse.

    Protesters appealed for the rule of law, carrying banners that read,
    "We are all witnesses, we want justice." The demonstrators also
    shouted out, "We are all Hrant Dinks, We are all Armenians."

    The journalist's wife and other relatives walked through the nearby
    square amidst hundreds applauding and proceeded to the courthouse
    half an hour before the hearing began.

    A large number of international journalists also turned up, as the
    European Union and international human rights groups see the trial
    as a litmus test for the Turkish legal system. Both Hrant Dink's
    lawyers and the print media have accused authorities of failing to
    act on reports of a plot to kill Dink, and it is yet unclear whether
    the allegations will be explored in the trial.

    A statement issued by the Europe and Central Asia director of Human
    Rights Watch (HRW), issued last Friday, said: "Hrant Dink's murder
    trial is a critical test of the Turkish judiciary's independence. We
    will be closely watching how the court handles any evidence that may
    implicate the security forces."

    In the wake of the murder earlier this year, Turkish authorities
    promised a full and thorough investigation. The governor and police
    chief of the Black Sea city of Trabzon -- the hometown of O.S. --
    were removed from office on charges of negligence in connection with
    the case. Police and gendarmerie officers who posed for photographs
    with the gunman as he held a Turkish flag were also dismissed.

    However, there has been no evidence that directly implicates any police
    or government officials in the slaying of Dink outside his office.

    Many here believe that a shadowy network of individuals with access
    to state power, referred to by critics as the "deep state," might be
    behind the Dink murder as well as crimes targeting perceived enemies
    in the name of nationalism.

    Two days before the trial, the Dink family's lawyer, Fethiye Cetin,
    said a retired noncommissioned officer -- a key suspect arrested after
    the discovery of 27 hand grenades and TNT explosives in Umraniye --
    was a co-plaintiff in past court cases against Dink. Dink had faced
    charges of "insulting Turkishness" for his comments on Armenian claims
    of genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. Dink, who called for
    reconciliation, was a hated figure for radical nationalists.

    Cetin also said much evidence linked to the Jan. 19 killing of Hrant
    Dink in the busy shopping district of Þiþli in central Ýstanbul,
    including video records recorded by security cameras in banks near
    the crime scene, had disappeared.

    Shortly before the trial on Monday, Erdal Doðan, another lawyer for
    the Dink family, expressed the same concern as Cetin. Replying to
    questions from the press at the courthouse, he said, "We are not
    satisfied about the real culprits not having been captured."

    Also yesterday, in response to a question on the plaintiffs' complaints
    about the alleged limits of the Dink investigation, lawyer Cetin said,
    "Our strategy will be to concentrate on that point. The gang is not
    just limited to the suspects. It is a well-organized gang. All members
    of the group should be rooted out. There is the negligence of the
    gendarmerie and the police that was virtually on purpose. These [acts]
    should be thoroughly investigated." Cetin also expressed that they had
    demanded another ongoing investigation into claims of negligence to
    be merged with the Dink trial. "These are interrelated crimes under
    Article 8 of the Criminal Procedures Law (CMK)."

    Approximately 500 lawyers from various parts of Turkey have obtained
    authorization to follow the trial from the plaintiff's side, with
    about 300 of them present yesterday for the first day of the trial.

    "This trial will be a test of whether this quagmire will be dried
    up or not," lawyer Kezban Hatemi, representing Dink's family, told
    reporters before the hearing Monday. "The indictment lacks evidence
    and there is a need to find the real culprits."

    Ali Bayramoðlu, a columnist at Dink's newspaper Agos, claimed "there
    are dark, semi-official forces in action."

    Dink's death prompted calls for the revision or repeal of Article 301,
    which is viewed by the EU as an obstacle to Turkey's efforts to join
    the bloc. No changes have yet been made.

    Hayal's lawyer harasses Dink family

    Security was tight at the Ýstanbul 14th High Criminal Court before
    the trial Monday morning.

    The lawyer for one of the suspects, Yasin Hayal, charged with having
    incited O.S. to carry out the assassination, told members of the
    press that he had no expectations from the trial. "I protest this
    type of pressuring of the Turkish judiciary. They will never think
    it fair no matter what decision comes out of this courtroom," he said.

    He also expressed his opinion that the indictment was erroneous in
    that there was no gang involvement in the killing.

    Hayal's laywer, Turgut, upon the arrival of Hrant Dink's wife and
    two daughters, amidst applauding onlookers, charged at the newcomers:
    "You are all Armenians! You all have Armenian passports!" Umit Abanoz,
    one of Dink's lawyers, yelled out and over Turgut's comments, "Take
    off your robe, you're a provocateur!" The tension died down with the
    intervention of police officers present in the room.

    --Boundary_(ID_Dx5QxW9c/6aNDruQADGnhw)--
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