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New Suspect Charged Over Murder Of Turkish-Armenian Journalist

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  • New Suspect Charged Over Murder Of Turkish-Armenian Journalist

    NEW SUSPECT CHARGED OVER MURDER OF TURKISH-ARMENIAN JOURNALIST

    Agence France Presse -- English
    July 19, 2007 Thursday

    Turkish prosecutors have charged a 19th suspect in connection with
    the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, according to
    court documents obtained by AFP Thursday.

    Coskun Igci, a relative of one of the alleged masterminds of the
    January 19 murder, was accused of belonging to an illegal organisation
    and aiding the killing, according to the documents.

    If found guilty, he risks a jail term of 22 to 35 years, Anatolia
    news agency said.

    The prosecutors called for Igci's case to be merged with the trial
    of the 18 other suspects, which began in Istanbul earlier this month.

    Dink, 52, a prominent member of Turkey's tiny Armenian minority,
    was gunned down outside the offices of his bilingual Turkish-Armenian
    weekly Agos, in central Istanbul.

    Although he campaigned for reconciliation, Turkish nationalists hated
    him for calling the massacres of Armenians under Ottoman rule during
    World War I genocide, a label that Turkey fiercely rejects.

    A 17-year-old youth, Ogun Samast, has admitted to shooting Dink
    because he was an "enemy of the Turks," according to prosecutors.

    Two other key suspects -- Igci's nephew Yasin Hayal and Tuncel Erhan,
    both aged 26 -- are accused of masterminding the plot and recruiting
    Samast to carry out the murder.

    Hayal told Igci he was plotting to kill Dink and sought his help to
    buy a gun, the indictement says.

    Igci maintains he informed a member of the intelligence service of
    the local paramilitary police of his nephew's plans, it says.

    The Turkish security forces are under fire for failing to prevent
    the murder despite having received several intelligence notes of a
    plot to kill Dink being organised in the northern city of Trabzon,
    the home of Samast and most of the other suspects.

    But no official has so far been charged over the murder.

    At the first hearing of the trial on July 2, the court accepted demands
    by the Dink family's lawyers to expand the investigation after they
    accused the police of "almost an intentional negligence."

    Dink's murder sent Turkey into shock and more than 100,000 people
    marched at his funeral, chanting "We are all Hrants, we are all
    Armenians."
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