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Turkey Pressured To Guarantee Fair Trial In Killing Of Armenian

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  • Turkey Pressured To Guarantee Fair Trial In Killing Of Armenian

    BosNewsLife, Hungary -
    July 4 2007


    Turkey Pressured To Guarantee Fair Trial In Killing Of Armenian
    Journalist

    Wednesday, 04 July 2007 (24 hours ago)
    By BosNewsLife News Center

    TURKEY (BosNewsLife)-- Fourteen suspects allegedly involved in the
    killing of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink this year remained
    behind bars Wednesday, July 4, amid international pressure on Turkish
    authorities to investigate the case.

    In a statement to BosNewsLife, human rights group Amnesty
    International said it has called the court in Istanbul to ensure that
    "all the evidence and circumstances be considered."

    However after a 12-hour hearing on Monday, July 2, the court already
    released four of the 18 suspects implicated in the killing of Hrant
    Dink, who was gunned down on January 19, until the resumption of the
    trial on October 1.

    His killing came after Dink, 53, angered Turkish nationalists by
    using the term "genocide" to describe the killings of up to 1.5
    million Armenian as well as Assyrian and Hellenic Christians carried
    out by Turkish Ottoman forces in the 1915-1917 period.

    GOVERNMENT DENIAL

    Turkey's government has denied the figure or the involvement of
    Turkish forces in mass killings and rejects the term "genocide,"
    saying no more than 300,000 Armenians perished at the time, mostly
    from hunger and disease.

    The trial is taking place behind closed doors because the alleged
    gunman, Ogun Samast, is a minor. Lawyer Bahri Belen, representing
    Dink's family, told reporters that the court agreed to broaden the
    investigation.

    In published statements two of the key suspects, Yasin Hayal and
    Erhan Tuncel, claimed they worked for the security forces. The
    alleged gunman has remained silent during the trial, according to
    observers.

    Amnesty International said it was concerned about developments in the
    case. "The Turkish authorities must ensure that, in examining the
    case, no stone is left unturned. All those involved in the killing of
    Hrant Dink -- those actively involved in planning and carrying out
    the fatal attack and those who failed to prevent it -- must be
    brought to justice," said Andrew Gardner, Amnesty International's
    researcher on Turkey.

    INREASING PATTERN

    "Hrant Dink's killing took place in the context of an increasing
    pattern of deadly intolerance of freedom of expression." The trial
    began amid reports of renewed pressure on minority Christians in this
    mainly Muslim nation.

    Two Turkish Christians have reportedly been accused of `insulting
    Turkish identity' under the nation's notorious Article 301, the same
    charge used in 2005 by a Turkish court to sentence Dink to six months
    imprisonment.

    Hakan Tastan and Turan Topal, both former Muslims, were summoned to
    Istanbul's Beyoglu police headquarters on Sunday morning, July 1,
    just before church services began at the Taksim Protestant Church,
    where Tastan is a member, news reports said.

    An administrative district authority in Istanbul reportedly ordered
    the converts from Islam to pay a fine for `illegal collection of
    funds' after they allegedly collected money without permission from
    local authorities.

    In a statement released by Christian news agency Compass Direct News,
    the men's attorney, Haydar Polat described the charges as
    "ridiculous." He said the case had "nothing whatever to do with the
    original case" against his clients. (With reporting from Turkey and
    BosNewsLife Research).

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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