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Turkish Court Agrees To Broaden Investigation Into Killing Of Ethnic

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  • Turkish Court Agrees To Broaden Investigation Into Killing Of Ethnic

    TURKISH COURT AGREES TO BROADEN INVESTIGATION INTO KILLING OF ETHNIC ARMENIAN JOURNALIST

    AP Worldstream
    Published: Jul 03, 2007

    A Turkish court has decided to broaden the investigation into the
    killing of an ethnic Armenian journalist to consider allegations of
    official negligence in the slaying, a lawyer said early Tuesday.

    After a 12-hour hearing on Monday, the court released four of the 18
    suspects implicated in the killing of Hrant Dink, who was gunned down
    on Jan. 19, until the resumption of the trial on Oct. 1.

    The killing led to international condemnation and debate within
    Turkey about free speech. Dink was hated by hardline nationalists for
    describing the mass killings of Armenians early in the last century
    as genocide.

    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 early
    Tuesday that the court agreed to broaden the investigation.

    Two of the key suspects, Yasin Hayal and Erhan Tuncel, claimed they
    worked for the security forces. The alleged gunman had remained silent
    during the trial.

    Tuncel, who is suspected of masterminding the killing, reportedly
    told the court that he was paid by police for gathering intelligence,
    according to a lawyer who attended Monday's hearing.

    The court decided to ask police to provide a list of Tuncel's
    telephone calls.

    Critics have accused authorities of failing to act on reports of a
    plot to kill Dink, and it is unclear whether allegations that could
    potentially be embarrassing for top officials will be explored in
    the trial.

    Hayal's lawyer Fuat Turgut said that his client and the gunman were
    "manipulated by certain forces because of their patriotic feelings."

    Turkey had vowed a thorough investigation, and the governor and police
    chief of the Black Sea city of Trabzon, the hometown of Samast, were
    removed from office because of negligence. Some security officials
    who posed for photographs with the gunman as he held a Turkish flag
    were also dismissed.

    There has been no evidence that directly implicates any police or
    government official in the slaying of Dink outside his office, however.

    Many Turks are convinced that a so-called "deep state" _ a network of
    state agents or ex-officials, possibly with links to organized crime
    _ periodically targets reformists and other perceived enemies in the
    name of nationalism.

    Dink sought to encourage reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia. But
    he was prosecuted under Article 301 of Turkey's penal code, which bans
    insults to Turkish identity, for his comments on the mass killings
    of Armenians by Turks in the early 20th century.
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