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ANKARA: Dink murder investigation stuck at square one on first

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  • ANKARA: Dink murder investigation stuck at square one on first

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 19 2008


    Dink murder investigation stuck at square one on first anniversary


    It has been exactly one year since Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink was fatally shot outside his office by an ultranationalist
    teenager, but the investigation into his murder has been stalled
    since the first few months after the assassination.

    The anniversary of Dink's murder is being commemorated with a series
    of ceremonies in Turkey and abroad. Dink's lawyers, domestic and
    international rights organizations and activists on this day are
    expressing their frustration that the murder investigation seems to
    be stuck at square one and voicing their concern that there may be
    attempts to protect the suspects. A lengthy list of suspicious
    irregularities in the Dink murder investigation, including deleted
    records and hidden files suggestive of a police cover-up attempt, has
    marred the judicial process. Much of the evidence has indicated that
    the murder could have been prevented.

    On Thursday the Dink family filed a criminal complaint against
    Ýstanbul Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah and the officers of the
    Ýstanbul Police Department on charges of negligence.

    The file accuses Cerrah and his police officers of having "abetted"
    the perpetrators of the Dink murder and of being members of the gang
    that plotted his assassination.

    Calls for abolishing or at least amending Article 301 of the Turkish
    Penal Code (TCK), which criminalizes "denigrating Turkishness," were
    renewed as the anniversary of Dink's murder approached. Dink had been
    sentenced to six months in prison under the controversial article. In
    a statement released on Friday, the International Publishers
    Association (IPA) announced they would be participating in the
    memorial activities to "be there in solidarity with the writers and
    publishers' community of Turkey, to find out more about the proposed
    legislative changes, and to meet with writers and publishers who are
    on trial or under threat." Bjørn Smith-Simonsen, the chairman of the
    IPA's Freedom to Publish Committee, said in a statement indicating
    that the IPA has been leading an international campaign for the
    repeal of Article 301.

    Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said in a statement, "The authorities
    must push ahead with the investigation in order to identify all
    those, whoever they are, who were involved in this terrible crime."

    The RSF also called for amending or repealing Article 301. "This is
    the only way to ensure that Dink is the last victim of hatred in
    Turkey," it said.

    Justice and Development Party (AK Party) deputy Zafer Üskül, who led
    a parliamentary committee which confirmed the irregularities in the
    Dink investigation, said Parliament's Human Rights Committee was
    working to shed light on the details of the Dink murder. "Inspectors
    are investigating the claims. Nobody should think they are serving
    brotherhood in this country by protecting gangs, thugs and
    terrorists," he said in a reference to apparent attempts to protect
    the suspects in the Dink case.

    According to Fethiye Çetin, who represents the Dink family in the
    trial, the Turkish public at large stands firmly behind an amendment
    of the infamous article. In an interview with Today's Zaman, Çetin
    admitted that changing the article is not something that can be done
    overnight. According to her, the AK Party government is willing to
    change the article as needed since it is an important obstacle to
    Turkey's accession talks with the EU. Çetin believes the government
    needs to find a balance between the pro-status quo establishment and
    the will of the people for change to protect its precarious position
    in Turkey's vulnerable democracy. Although the establishment is
    against changing 301, the government should not be discouraged and
    must keep on trying to change it. "They have the public support to
    change this article," Çetin said.

    What went wrong with the investigation

    At the end of a long year of police and judicial investigations into
    the Dink murder, little has been achieved because much evidence
    linking the suspects to the murder has disappeared, or rather has
    been purposefully destroyed, according to Çetin. "We simply can't do
    our work properly," she said.

    Following Dink's murder, mounting evidence has indicated that the
    police were tipped off about the assassination plot a couple of
    times, months before the actual attack. Ýstanbul's police chief has
    also acknowledged that there was a tip-off about a possible attack on
    Dink, but said its urgency level was too low for his department to
    take it seriously.

    More dishearteningly, links between the police and suspects have been
    revealed. For example, Erhan Tuncel, a key suspect in the murder, was
    previously a police informant. Although Tuncel is suspected of having
    incited Dink's murderer, he is also the one said to have tipped off
    the Ýstanbul police. Important pieces of evidence, including Tuncel's
    police records, were hidden from the court. In fact, Tuncel's file
    with the police was destroyed, since it constitutes a "state secret"
    according to officials.

    The investigation has yielded more evidence linking the masterminds
    of the murder plot to the police force in Ýstanbul, Trabzon, the
    hometown of most of the suspects and the place where the
    assassination was planned, and in Ankara, where the police had
    intelligence about the murder.

    Acts committed in the name of obscuring crucial evidence were not
    limited to hiding or destroying files on suspects, Çetin says.
    Footage from the security cameras of shops and banks located close to
    the crime scene recorded during the time of the murder was also
    mysteriously lost. Çetin believes if these recordings had not been
    lost, they would have been invaluable in locating the contacts of the
    hit man and his accomplice, if there was anybody else with him at the
    time of the murder.

    'Nationalism is an instrument of dark forces clinging to power'

    According to Çetin, who formerly led a committee on minorities under
    the Ýstanbul Bar Association, the blatant hiding or destroying of
    evidence is deeply related to the unhealthy functioning of the
    Turkish justice system. "Turkey is not a properly functioning state
    of law," Çetin said. Like many here, she said she is certain that
    dark and powerful behind-the-scenes forces within the state hold the
    real power. "It is these powers that have authority over the justice
    system," she explained. Çetin said since the founding of the Republic
    of Turkey there has always been an alliance of some parts of the
    military and civilian bureaucracy who deemed themselves the guardians
    of the republic. According to Çetin, the fight has always been
    between "those who want to change the system and those who want to
    keep it as it is."

    Çetin said current developments suggest that pro-status-quo forces
    are starting to use nationalism as an instrument to foment public
    opinion in a way that serves their interests. This new brand of
    nationalism is increasingly taking root in society, she said. "At
    this point these groups start to use nationalism as a tool to
    mobilize the people. Suddenly there is a big civil movement of
    nationalists coming to the surface, regarding itself as a guardian,
    too," she added.

    This new development she sees is reflected not only in the case of
    Dink but also in the brutal murders of three Bible publishers in the
    southeastern city of Malatya last April. The investigation into the
    Malatya murders has also produced questions similar to those in the
    Dink investigation, including evidence suggestive of a police
    cover-up and dubious links between one of the suspects and the
    Malatya chief of police.

    "Indeed, there are huge similarities between these two cases," Çetin
    confirmed. Those fanning nationalist sentiment in favor of the status
    quo naturally need to invent an enemy, she said. "Christians are,
    therefore, an easy target. They are few, they are non-Muslim and they
    are simply different," she explained.


    19.01.2008

    KRISTINA KAMP, BARIÞ ALTINTAÞ ÝSTANBUL
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