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Turks Demand Justice For Slain Journalist Hrant Dink

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  • Turks Demand Justice For Slain Journalist Hrant Dink

    TURKS DEMAND JUSTICE FOR SLAIN JOURNALIST HRANT DINK

    Southeast European Times, MD
    Jan 21 2008

    Commemorating the first anniversary of Turkish-Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink's murder, thousands of people demanded on Saturday that
    all those behind his assassination be brought to justice.

    (Zaman - 21/01/08; Bianet - 20/01/08; Reuters, AP, AFP, DPA, UPI, BBC -
    19/01/08; Amnesty International, Reporters Without Borders - 18/01/08)

    Thousands of people gathered in downtown Istanbul on Saturday (January
    19th) to commemorate the first anniversary of Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink's murder.

    Carrying banners reading "For Hrant, For Justice", the mourners
    placed red carnations on the spot where the founder and editor of the
    bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly, Agos, was last seen alive. Dink,
    who devoted his life to the reconciliation between his community
    and the majority Muslim Turks, was gunned down on January 19th 2007,
    outside his newspaper's offices.

    With a huge portrait of the ethnic Armenian journalist covering part
    of the building where he worked and candles lit on the street, the
    mourners observed a minute of silence at the exact time he was shot
    by Ogun Samast, who is described as a hardline nationalist from the
    Black Sea city of Trabzon.

    "We are at the pavement where they tried to clean his blood with soap,"
    Dink's widow, Rakel, said at the ceremony, reportedly attended by
    10,000 people. "You are here for justice today. A scream for justice
    rises from your silence."

    Samast -- who immediately confessed to the killing -- and 18 others,
    most of them also from Trabzon, are currently being tried in Istanbul.

    Claiming that evidence has been destroyed and that authorities have
    refused to probe the suspected involvement of members of Turkish
    security forces in the murder plot, lawyers representing the Dink
    family have described the investigation as flawed.

    "Unnecessary administrative decisions blocked judicial investigations
    of state employees that should have been carried out," the group quoted
    Bahri Bayram Belen, one of the lawyers, as saying. "Since the initial
    investigation, certain enquiries ... have not been appropriately
    conducted because the security forces did not participate."

    Marking the first anniversary, Reporters Without Borders and Amnesty
    International urged Turkish authorities to bring all those involved in
    the case to justice. They also repeated their call for the abolition
    of the controversial Article 301, which makes it a crime to insult
    "Turkishness" and has been used against scores of Turkish journalists,
    writers and intellectuals.

    Dink was prosecuted on charges of "denigrating Turkishness" due to an
    article describing the killings of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians
    during World War I as "genocide", which is not the official Turkish
    position on the issue. He was convicted and given a six-month suspended
    sentence in July 2006.

    "The continuing suppression of freedom of expression in Turkey has
    created an atmosphere of deadly intolerance culminating in the killing
    of Hrant Dink," Amnesty International's researcher on Turkey Andrew
    Gardner said on Friday. "In addition to implementing current legal
    reforms, urgent legislative reform must be adopted. The authorities
    must seize the opportunity to advance the protection of fundamental
    rights and freedoms for all in the new constitution that is being
    drafted."

    Turkish Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin told journalists Saturday
    that draft amendments to Article 301 would soon be submitted to
    parliament.

    According to Reporters Without Borders, the proposed changes fall
    "well short of satisfying" its calls for the complete abolition of
    the controversial legislation, as "the proposed amendment offers
    no solution to the problem of the article's arbitrary application
    by judges."

    This content was commissioned for SETimes.com
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