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ANKARA: Police detain BBP Trabzon head in Dink murder probe

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  • ANKARA: Police detain BBP Trabzon head in Dink murder probe

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    March 27 2007


    Police detain BBP Trabzon head in Dink murder probe


    TNA with wires
    27 March 2007


    Police late Sunday detained 10 people in Trabzon including Yasar
    Cihan, the Grand Unity Party's (BBP) Trabzon head, as part its
    investigation of the January killing of journalist Hrant Dink.

    It was not immediately known on what grounds the politician was
    detained.

    The detainees were brought to Istanbul Police headquarters following
    procedures in Trabzon, and police said Cihan was detained in line
    with testimony of the Erhan Tuncel, one of the key suspects. Halis
    Egemen of the same party is also wanted by the police.

    Shortly after Dink's killing, Cihan allegedly assisted the family of
    Yasin Hayal, said to be the inciter of the Dink murder, with YTL
    1,000 when he was in prison. Cihan had admitted having given money to
    one of the suspects' families but had insisted it was part of charity
    money he regularly donates to needy families.

    'Instigator well protected,' claims Patriarch Mesrob II

    Just hours before the police net, Patriarch Mesrob II, the spiritual
    head of the Armenian Orthodox community in Turkey, criticized
    authorities for failing to find those who ordered Dink's killing. At
    an Easter ceremony in Hatay, Mesrob Moutafian claimed, "The real
    instigators of Hrant Dink's assassination are well protected and
    that's why they haven't been exposed."

    Although confirming that police were interrogating Cihan and three
    other party officials, the party's leader, Muhsin Yazicioglu said, "I
    don't know why they have been detained after months passed in this
    investigation but it's also wrong to accuse everyone with murder that
    has been detained."

    Yazicioglu declined to make further comment on the issue, as it is a
    judicial matter now.

    Dink, the 52-year-old editor of the bilingual Agos newspaper and an
    outspoken activist for minority rights and free expression, had been
    brought to trial several times for allegedly "insulting Turkishness,"
    a crime under Turkey's penal code. He was killed outside the offices
    of his paper, Agos, in Istanbul on Jan. 19. Prosecutors have pressed
    charges against 10 suspects, including some former members of the
    BBP's youth wing. Most of the suspects are from Trabzon. Dink's
    killing prompted international condemnation as well as debate within
    Turkey about free speech, and whether state institutions were
    tolerant of militant nationalists.
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