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Heavy Sentences Sought Over Armenian Dink's Murder

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  • Heavy Sentences Sought Over Armenian Dink's Murder

    HEAVY SENTENCES SOUGHT OVER ARMENIAN DINK'S MURDER

    Middle East Times, Egypt
    May 7 2007

    ISTANBUL -- Turkish prosecutors sought heavy prison terms for 18
    people over the murder of an ethnic Armenian journalist that they
    said was the work of a terrorist organization, the Anatolia news
    agency reported Monday.

    The trial is expected to start July 2, the semi-official agency said.

    Hrant Dink's murder January 19 raised alarm about rising nationalism
    and hostility against minorities in Turkey. The journalist's funeral
    turned into a huge demonstration as some 100,000 people marched behind
    his coffin, calling for tolerance and reconciliation with Armenia.

    The indictment calls for life sentences for two alleged ringleaders
    who instigated the killing in which Dink, 52, was gunned down outside
    the offices of his Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos in Istanbul.

    One of them, university student Erhan Tuncel, also faces an additional
    prison term between 22.5 and 48 years on other charges including
    being a leader of a terrorist organization.

    The indictment calls for an additional sentence of 18 to 30 years
    in jail for the second man, Yasin Hayal, on other charges including
    being a leader of a terrorist organization.

    Hayal is believed to have provided the money and gun used in the
    murder.

    The two prosecutors demanded a prison term between 18 and 24 years
    for Ogun Samast, a 17-year-old jobless secondary school graduate who
    confessed to shooting Dink.

    Samast also faces an additional prison term of between 8.5 to 18
    years for being a member of a terrorist organization and carrying an
    unlicensed gun.

    The indictment calls for prison terms between 7.5 and 35 years for
    the remaining 15 suspects for helping in the murder.

    The prosecutors considered the group as a terrorist organization,
    which aggravates the sentences sought for the crime.

    Most of the suspects are from the Black Sea city of Trabzon - a bastion
    of nationalism - and are believed to have targeted Dink for his views
    on the World War I killings of Armenians under Ottoman rule.

    Dink described the 1915-18 killings as genocide, a label that Turkey,
    the Ottoman Empire's successor, categorically rejects.

    Nationalists branded him a traitor after he was given a suspended
    six-month jail sentence last year for "insulting Turkishness."

    One of the charges brought against Hayal was related to him threatening
    Turkish Nobel-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk, who was also charged
    over remarks about the Armenian massacres, but escaped trial thanks
    to a technicality.

    Dink, one of the most prominent members of Turkey's tiny Armenian
    minority, was widely respected as a sincere campaigner for reconciling
    Turkey and Armenia, which have failed to establish diplomatic ties
    over the genocide dispute.
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