Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Dink's lawyers call for probe to focus on state

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

  • ANKARA: Dink's lawyers call for probe to focus on state

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 16 2007

    Dink's lawyers call for probe to focus on state


    The integrity of the rule of law in Turkey is itself on trial,
    according to lawyers representing the family of murdered newspaper
    editor Hrant Dink.


    They called yesterday for a more vigorous criminal investigation into
    what they said was a criminal conspiracy with connections to state
    institutions themselves. "This is a political assassination and
    culpability does not end with the unemployed boy who pulled the
    trigger or his immediate accomplices in Trabzon," said Bahri Belen,
    one of the legal representatives.

    The integrity of the rule of law in Turkey is itself on trial,
    according to lawyers representing the family of murdered newspaper
    editor Hrant Dink. They called yesterday for a more vigorous criminal
    investigation into what they said was a criminal conspiracy with
    connections to state institutions themselves.

    "This is a political assassination and culpability does not end with
    the unemployed boy who pulled the trigger or his immediate
    accomplices in Trabzon," said Bahri Belen, one of the legal
    representatives. He was speaking in front of the Beþiktaþ High
    Criminal Court after presenting a petition to the public prosecutor's
    office to widen the murder investigation. The ability to organize an
    assassination in Ýstanbul all points to a wider and more determined
    organization," he said.

    The Dink family lawyers include human rights activist Ergin Cinmen
    and Fethiye Çetin, author of a controversial memoir about discovering
    that her grandmother was an Armenian, orphaned in 1915. They said the
    enquiry must now concentrate on why Istanbul security authorities
    ignored repeated warnings specifying the threat to Dink. They
    emphasized it was not necessary to wait for the results of an ongoing
    official administrative enquiry into this official neglect to pursue
    the criminal investigation.

    Cinmen announced himself pleased with the consultations with public
    prosecutor Fikret Seçen, but said that "good intentions" were not
    enough to resolve the problem. He pointed to a long history of
    prosecutions failing because other state organizations had applied
    pressure or failed to cooperate. Turkey's reputation as a democratic
    nation ruled by a state of law required a thorough and transparent
    investigation, he said.

    Cinmen cited the infamous Susurluk car accident in 1996 which
    revealed connections between politicians, organized crime and the
    police. If that had been investigated properly then a later
    investigation into the bombing of the book store in the southeastern
    town of Þemdinli might have succeeded. In this later incident, the
    public prosecutor was dismissed when his investigation pointed to
    state agents provocateurs as responsible for the blast.

    "For the current investigation to get to the bottom of the Dink
    murder would be an important precedent," Cinmen said.

    Dink was shot in front of the offices of his Agos newspaper on Jan.
    19 this year. Although police apprehended 17-year-old O.S., who
    confessed to the crime, the Dink family lawyers allege a greater
    conspiracy. They point to a series of informer reports that were
    forwarded to Istanbul by the Trabzon police which included the names
    of those now under arrest.

    "Ignoring seven separate informant reports is more than simple
    administrative neglect," Çetin said.


    16.03.2007

    ANDREW FINKEL ÝSTANBUL
Working...
X