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The Murder Of Hrant Dink: A Turkish Court Denies A Wider Conspiracy

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  • The Murder Of Hrant Dink: A Turkish Court Denies A Wider Conspiracy

    THE MURDER OF HRANT DINK: A TURKISH COURT DENIES A WIDER CONSPIRACY

    http://lurer.com/?p=67480&l=en
    2013-01-09 15:27:54

    The journalist Hrant Dink was no stranger to sinister e-mails
    and anonymous death threats. Turkish of Armenian descent, he was a
    well-known and outspoken advocate for peace between the two bitterly
    estranged nations. That won him few friends among rabid Turkish
    nationalists who hated Dink because he openly said the killings of
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians in the early 20th century was
    genocide - a term Turkey rejects.

    But things rapidly got worse for Dink in January 2007. Sentenced by
    a court for "insulting Turkishness," he was vilified by mainstream
    newspapers and called into a meeting at the Istanbul governor's office
    to be warned that he had gone too far. "I am now a target," he wrote.

    "My soul," he wrote shortly after the meeting, "has the skittishness
    of a dove ... a bit frightened, but free."

    The day those words were published, Dink was gunned down outside
    his newspaper's office, shot in the head three times by Ogun Samast,
    then 17, who was later apprehended in Trabzon, a city on the Black Sea
    coast, where patriotism and machismo run high. Leaked pictures showed
    police and army officers apparently giving the young man a hero's
    welcome: they posed, smiling, against the backdrop of a Turkish flag.

    According to rights activists, the case file is riddled with
    contradictions, misplaced evidence, ATM-camera footage that
    mysteriously disappeared and dozens of other suspect details. Even more
    striking is that since the trial began in 2007, several individuals
    believed to be involved in Dink's assassination have been arrested
    in connection with Ergenekon, an alleged ultra-nationalist network
    that sought to topple the government. Yet lawyers have been unable to
    question them about their connection to the Dink case. "This shows
    us that the boundaries between who is immune from prosecution or
    not are predrawn, and you can only go after someone when the state
    deems it appropriate, which is not the case for Hrant Dink's murder,"
    said the Istanbul-based Human Rights Platform in a special report.

    Turkey's President Abdullah Gul promised last year to personally
    pursue the case - "a clean Turkey," he said, "was a personal
    responsibility." He ordered state auditors to look into the
    allegations, although little has come of that initiative, and his
    reaction to Tuesday's verdict remains to be seen. Dink's family -
    his wife, son and daughter - will likely appeal the ruling.

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