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Two Turkish Policemen On Trial For Posing With Suspect In Dink Murde

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  • Two Turkish Policemen On Trial For Posing With Suspect In Dink Murde

    TWO TURKISH POLICEMEN ON TRIAL FOR POSING WITH SUSPECT IN DINK MURDER

    By Agence France Presse (AFP)
    Daily Star - Lebanon
    Sept 29 2007

    ANKARA: Two Turkish policemen went on trial Friday for their role
    in a scandal which saw security forces pose for pictures with the
    suspected murderer of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, the
    official Anatolia news agency reported. The trial in the northern
    city of Samsun is the first time that members of the security forces
    have been brought before a court over the January 19 murder, which
    the police are accused of failing to prevent.

    The charges followed a complaint from Dink's family that police
    protected the self-confessed killer, 17-year-old Ogun Samast, when
    he was captured in Samsun a day after Dink was shot dead in Istanbul.

    Footage and photos leaked to the media at the time showed officers,
    some of them in uniform, posing with Samast as he held a Turkish flag,
    unleashing accusations that some officials may secretly approve of
    the murder.

    Eight police officers were given disciplinary sanctions, but only Metin
    Balta, the deputy head of the terrorism department, and Ibrahim Firat,
    a police chief in the same office, have been charged over the incident.

    Balta is accused of "abusing his office by allowing acts unbefitting
    state officials and leading to the impression that there was sympathy
    for Samast's action," Anatolia said.

    He could be sentenced to between six months and two years in jail if
    found guilty.

    Firat risks a one-to-five-year jail sentence on charges of "violating
    the secrecy of the investigation" by leaking the images to the media,
    Anatolia added.

    The police are also under fire for failing to prevent the murder
    despite having received intelligence of a plot to kill Dink being
    organized in the northern city of Trabzon, the home of Samast and
    most of his suspected associates.

    Dink, 52, a prominent member of Turkey's tiny Armenian minority,
    was gunned down outside the offices of his bilingual Turkish-Armenian
    weekly Agos, in central Istanbul.
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