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Protests Mark Turkish-Armenian Editor's Murder Trial

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  • Protests Mark Turkish-Armenian Editor's Murder Trial

    PROTESTS MARK TURKISH-ARMENIAN EDITOR'S MURDER TRIAL

    Reuters
    The Nelson Mail, New Zealand
    The Dominion Post, New Zealand
    Marlborough Express, New Zealand
    Oct 1 2007

    SOLIDARITY: Demonstrators at an Istanbul court hold up placards which
    read: 'We all are Hrant Dink, we all are Armenians' during the trial
    of the suspects charged with the killing of Turkish-Armenian editor
    Hrant Dink.

    Hundreds of demonstrators fearing a state cover-up of the murder of
    a Turkish-Armenian editor demonstrated outside an Istanbul courthouse
    proclaiming: "We are all witnesses. We demand justice."

    The EU, which opened membership talks with Turkey in 2005, sees
    the case of Hrant Dink as a litmus test for a judicial system often
    accused of conservative political bias.

    Police imposed heavy security outside the court house where 19 suspects
    were being tried over the killing of Dink, gunned down outside his
    Istanbul office in January by a 17-year-old who has confessed to
    the killing.

    "We are all witnesses, we demand justice," said banners held aloft by
    the protesters outside the court as the trial resumed in the Besiktas
    district of Istanbul.

    Dink's lawyers have complained that the murder has not been properly
    investigated and have expressed fears for the independence of the
    court, reflecting concerns about the possible involvement of Turkey's
    so-called "deep state".

    The "deep state" is a term coined to describe hardline nationalists
    in the bureaucracy and security forces who are prepared to subvert
    the law for their own political ends.

    At the weekend, Turkey's liberal Radikal newspaper published the
    transcript of a conversation between one of the suspects and a police
    officer two hours after the shooting which it said showed the officer
    was aware of a plan to kill Dink.

    The Interior Ministry has launched a probe into the the telephone
    conversation.

    Dink had angered Turkish nationalists with his comments on the
    massacres of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey during WW1. More than 100,000
    people turned out at his funeral to show solidarity and protest against
    violent nationalism. Lawyers were expected to question the suspects
    for the first time at Monday's hearing. Eight suspects are in custody.

    Media reports have said one of the suspects had repeatedly tipped
    off police about a plot to kill Dink and that these tip-offs had been
    conveyed to the Istanbul police headquarters.

    Several officials, including the head of police intelligence in
    Istanbul, have been sacked or reassigned to other jobs over their
    handling of the Dink case.

    Ankara denies Armenian claims, backed by many historians and by a
    growing number of foreign parliaments, that the killings amounted
    to a systematic genocide. It says large numbers of both Muslim Turks
    and Christian Armenians died in ethnic fighting as the Ottoman Empire
    collapsed during WW1.
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