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RWB: Dink family want proof of govt intention to punish responsible

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  • RWB: Dink family want proof of govt intention to punish responsible

    Reporters without borders (press release), France
    March 19 2007


    Murdered journalist's family want proof of government's intention to
    punish all those responsible

    Reporters Without Borders today backed lawyers for the family of
    Hrant Dink, the murdered Turkish-Armenian editor of the weekly
    newspaper Agos, in a call to the Istanbul chief prosecutor to punish
    all those who failed to act on information that could have prevented
    Dink's murder in Istanbul on 19 January.

    Lawyer Fethiye Cetin said in the 15 March request that at least 17
    messages warning of a plot to kill the journalist had been sent to
    Istanbul police by police in Trabzon, where many of the suspects
    live. The lawyers also demanded that all legal procedures in the case
    be transferred to an Istanbul court.

    Reporters Without Borders said it expected `action against police who
    displayed disgraceful negligence in the murder of Dink and some of
    whom showed sympathy for the suspected killer. However, the
    authorities have hardly been convincing in their condemnation of the
    murder.'

    Cetin and his colleague Bahri Bayram Belen told the media that the
    murder could not have been an isolated act only involving people in
    the Pelitli neighbourhood of Trabzon. The numerous attacks by
    ultra-nationalist groups since a bomb blast at a McDonald's
    restaurant in Trabzon in 2004 have continued since Dink's death, they
    said, suggesting that a `terrorist group threatening the democratic
    rule of law' was responsible.

    Cetin demanded to know what had become of official legal action begun
    against police in Samsun, the town where the suspected killer, Ogün
    Samast, was arrested and where police officers had taken `souvenir'
    photos of themselves with Samast.

    Reporters Without Borders said the government had shown `little
    evidence of its intention to put an end to ultra-nationalist
    violence' and `repeated threats to journalists and intellectuals
    discussing the 1915 massacres of Armenians and the Kurdish question.'

    http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_art icle=21364
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