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ANKARA: 'Punishing Dink Murderer Just The Tip Of The Iceberg'

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  • ANKARA: 'Punishing Dink Murderer Just The Tip Of The Iceberg'

    'PUNISHING DINK MURDERER JUST THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG'

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 5 2007

    Capturing and punishing the teenager who shot Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink outside his Ýstanbul office in January would
    only eliminate the "tip of an iceberg," a German politician has said,
    calling for a thorough investigation into the murder and removal of
    the infamous Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), under which
    Dink had faced trial for "insulting Turkishness."

    Claudia Roth

    Claudia Roth said her presence at the second hearing of the Dink murder
    trial earlier this week was first of all "a matter of solidarity to
    support his family and friends."

    Beyond that, she said "it was a political signal. We have to show
    that we will not forget what happened. Europe is closely watching
    how the investigation proceeds and takes this as a first test for
    the government to show how serious they really take their promises."

    Roth, co-chairperson of the German Alliance '90/Green Party and
    deputy chair of the German-Turkish Parliamentary Friendship Group,
    was in Turkey to attend the trial and meet with Turkish leaders,
    including President Abdullah Gul and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdoðan, after the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) was
    re-elected to power in the July 22 elections.

    A 17-year-old suspect, identified as O.S., has confessed to killing
    Dink on Jan. 19. But controversy over the case continues to grow,
    with critics complaining of a state cover-up and judicial negligence
    in finding and punishing possible accomplices within the police
    department. Audio recordings of a phone conversation between a police
    officer and one of the key suspects in the crime, suggesting that
    the police officer was aware of the planned killing, were released
    by Turkish media over the weekend, but authorities refused to allow
    an investigation into the police officer concerned.

    Punishing O.S. would mean "just eliminating the tip of the iceberg,"
    Roth said in an interview with Today's Zaman. "But as we all know,
    the Titanic didn't sink because of that top. Rather it was due to what
    was hidden below the water's surface. It is necessary to illuminate
    the background, to reach the actual wirepuller behind this abhorrent
    crime."

    Roth is convinced that a "deep state" -- referring to shadowy elements
    of the state cooperating with criminal gangs in order to "protect the
    interests of the state" -- was involved in the crime, citing media
    reports that showed police officials in O.S.'s hometown of Trabzon
    were aware of the crime long before it took place. "The 'deep state'
    is not just a conspiracy theory, but [it] really exists.

    Turkish security institutions and judicial apparatuses need to
    be cleansed of such elements by someone who will act in this task
    decisively and adamantly," she said. "Otherwise it will undermine
    this country one day."

    According to the German politician, if there is any positive thing
    about the Dink murder, it is that it showed removal of Article 301 of
    the TCK is now a matter of urgency. Roth, after meeting with Prime
    Minister Erdoðan on Wednesday evening, said he told her Article 301
    would be changed.

    "Turkey has to understand that freedom of speech and press is one
    of the most urgent preconditions for any democratic society and a
    developing civility," she said, emphasizing that the government has
    no excuse after its election victory on July 22 and the election of
    Gul as president in August. "With the government majority and the
    presidency in one hand, it is time now to prove the true will to
    bring the necessary and essential reforms," she remarked.

    Responding to a question about those opposing Turkey's EU membership,
    particularly French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Roth said she had been
    given homework by President Gul when they met in Ankara earlier this
    week, which is that she would raise her voice against anti-Turkey
    rhetoric, including that from Sarkozy. "And I promised to do my
    homework," she stated.

    --Boundary_(ID_Yw53xFRRP8udGEekoBvmtw)--
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