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Turkey: Murder Suspects Blame Alleged Ringleader

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  • Turkey: Murder Suspects Blame Alleged Ringleader

    TURKEY: MURDER SUSPECTS BLAME ALLEGED RINGLEADER

    Compass Direct News
    http://compassdirect.org/en/display.php?page= lead&lang=en&length=long&idelement=520 1
    Jan 23 2008
    CA

    Young Muslim says intent was not to kill but to seize evidence against
    three Christians.

    MALATYA, Turkey, January 23 (Compass Direct News) - The first of
    five young Turkish Muslims on trial for torturing and killing three
    Christians in eastern Turkey took the witness stand last week,
    vigorously denying that the group had planned to kill the evangelicals.

    In chilling testimony of the final hours of Necati Aydin, Ugur Yuksel
    and Tilmann Geske, accused killer Hamit Ceker stated before Malatya's
    Third Criminal Court on Monday (January 14) , that during the savage
    attack on Zirve Publishing Company's office on April 18, he saw leading
    suspect Emre Gunaydin slit the throats of two of the Christians.

    Denying that the group of young conspirators had planned to kill the
    two former Muslims who had converted to Christianity or their German
    colleague, Ceker told the judge that the confrontation turned "tense"
    when Aydin, who pastored a small Protestant congregation in Malatya,
    declared to the five young Muslims, "We are all the children of Jesus."

    But the defendant claimed that he himself had no part in killing the
    three Christians. Although Ceker testified that they had brought
    along guns and a lengthy section of rope, and that each of them
    carried a newly purchased knife, a pair of plastic gloves and an
    Islamic jawshan (protective prayer inscription), he insisted the
    purpose of the operation was to seize incriminating evidence against
    the Christians, not to kill them.

    He testified that he and some of the others had tried to persuade
    Gunaydin to leave the men tied up on the floor and escape.

    "No, they know me now," Gunaydin replied, according to Ceker. "I
    won't leave without killing them."

    Ceker testified that Gunaydin then ordered suspect Salih Gurler to
    strangle Aydin. When Gurler tried but finally gave up and said he
    couldn't do it, the ringleader promptly went over and began stabbing
    Aydin, slashing his throat, Ceker said.

    Gunaydin then took a towel to cover Geske's face and cut his throat,
    Ceker said, adding that he was unaware of how Yuksel died.

    "I didn't see how Ugur was killed," Ceker said. "I just heard him
    cry out, 'Jesus!'"

    A 32-year-old man from a village near Elazig engaged to be married,
    Yuksel died in a hospital several hours after Ceker finally unlocked
    the door and surrendered to the police. Aydin, 35, father of two
    children, and Geske, 46, a father of three, were already dead, their
    bodies mutilated with multiple stab wounds.

    By that time, Ceker said, Gunaydin had tried to escape over the third
    floor balcony, falling to the pavement and suffering serious injuries.

    Under cross-examination from his defense lawyer, Ceker claimed he had
    been intimidated by Gunaydin's threats to harm him and his family if
    he did not cooperate in the plot to expose and put a halt to Christian
    missionary activities in Malatya.

    Police Complicity

    Ceker also said that Gunaydin was known to have close relations with
    the local police chief, so he was reluctant to report the ringleader's
    plot to the police. But he admitted that the night before, he and
    another of the defendants had sat in the hall of their dormitory,
    writing a letter to their families in case things did not turn
    out well.

    "We thought that we might not come back from this incident, and that
    whether we returned or not, it was going to come back on our heads,"
    Ceker said.

    Ceker confirmed under questioning that the group had performed special
    Muslim "thanksgiving prayers" together early on the morning of the
    murders. But he said he didn't know the meaning of that ritual nor
    why they did it.

    In answer to his lawyer's question as to whether he had in any way
    "helped the men who were tied up on the floor," Ceker claimed he had
    loosened the cords tightly binding Yuksel's wrists, and even slipped
    a packet under his head.

    Ceker's comments, which came near the close of the 10-hour hearing,
    brought a verbal outburst from Semse Aydin, widow of Necati Aydin
    and a plaintiff in the case.

    "They went there to kill our husbands, and then they say they
    did things to make them comfortable!" the widow cried out in the
    courtroom. "This is contemptible!"

    After a second outburst moments later, the widow was ordered out
    of the courtroom by Judge Eray Gurtekin, although he recalled her
    moments later when plaintiff lawyers protested.

    Anti-Christian Rhetoric

    Prior to Ceker's testimony, two young men accused of involvement in
    the murder plot were called to the witness stand, one by one. The
    judge ordered all other defendants removed from the courtroom to
    prevent them from hearing and influencing each others' testimonies.

    Suspect Kursat Kocadag admitted that Gunaydin had started talking
    against Christians to him about four months before the murders.

    Malatya courthouse In a local cafe, Gunaydin had complained to him
    and other students that there were 49 "house churches" in Malatya,
    and that these Christian missionary activities represented a strong
    threat to Islam and Turkish society, he said.

    He showed Kocadag a book entitled More Than a Carpenter, declaring
    that it "slandered Allah, our prophet and our book," Kocadag said.

    "He said that we needed to penetrate them, to find out where they
    were getting their money, from what businessmen, and if necessary to
    become martyrs and kill them," Kocadag told the court.

    Six weeks before the killings, Kocadag said, he agreed to hide in his
    home a pistol that Gunaydin gave him, saying he was afraid authorities
    might search his student dormitory and find it. The night before the
    murders, Gunaydin collected the gun, later found at the scene of the
    crime, from Kocadag's home.

    He also went with Gunaydin to some meetings of the Nur sect of Islam,
    where he said about 25 university students were studying the books
    of Said-i Nursi, a Sufi mystic influential in Turkish politics in
    the mid-20th century.

    Under questioning, Kocadag said that Gunaydin was not very religiously
    observant and admitted that he himself did nothing more than Friday
    prayers.

    But when Kocadag refused to join Gunaydin in his plan to spy on and
    intimidate Christians in Malatya, he said Gunaydin stopped talking
    to him about it any more.

    'Others' Supporting Plot

    Along with murder suspect Ceker, Kocadag denied that he had any
    information as to who Gunaydin may have been referring to when
    he mentioned "others" who were supporting and encouraging the
    anti-missionary plot.

    The second youth charged with conspiring with the murderers, Mehmet
    Gokce, promptly identified himself as the son of a local policeman.

    Gokce claimed that he had very little contact or relationship with
    Gunaydin, whose family lived opposite his computer shop where he sold
    CDs and repaired computers.

    According to Gokce, Gunaydin had simply asked him if he could help him
    copy a computer hard disk containing information about missionaries.

    He just thought Gunaydin was "goofing around" when he said he would
    use the word "apple" instead of "computer" in any mobile telephone
    messages about the hard disk he wanted to get copied, Gokce said. He
    claimed he had no knowledge whatever of the group's criminal plans.

    For the first time, Yuksel's mother and aging father, who suffered a
    severe stroke several months after his youngest son's murder, were
    able to attend the trial.

    At one point mid-morning, as the defendants filed out of the courtroom
    under heavy guard, Yuksel's mother shouted at them from a nearby bench
    of observers, "Is your conscience troubled? Can you sleep at night?"

    In comments headlined by the Turkish press the next day, widow Susanne
    Geske declared that she and her children who are still living in
    Malatya wanted to visit the murderers in prison.

    "We want to meet with the killers, but I am waiting for the right
    time," she said. "I don't want to ask them questions; I just have
    something to say. My children are asking, 'When will we go to them?'"

    On the eve of the second hearing, the two widows agreed for the first
    time since the week of the murders to be interviewed on Turkish
    television. The taped interviews sharing their memories of their
    husbands appeared on CNNTURK the evening of the trial.

    Exposing Masterminds

    Geske also reiterated that she did not believe that the slaughter
    was plotted only by the five young men. "I want to know who put these
    five people up to this, to find those who are 'behind the curtain,'"
    she said.

    According to attorney Orhan Kemal Cengiz, leading the team of plaintiff
    lawyers, it is vital to identify the perpetrators behind the attack.

    Cengiz told Compass after the hearing that he and his colleagues were
    "irritated and very angry" about the killings themselves, as well as
    the prosecution's investigation and judiciary handling of the case.

    In particular, he cited the court's refusal to hand over key evidence
    in the prosecution file, including documents, CDs and photographs
    that Cengiz said are all crucial "in order to question the defendants
    properly."

    Last week the judge also denied permission to record the court
    proceedings, which would provide a complete text of all the oral
    arguments rather than just an abbreviated summary.

    Formal requests to remove 16 files of information about the religious
    activities of the three Christians, and to charge the perpetrators with
    "religious genocide," were also denied.

    The Malatya court has refused to accept as evidence the video films
    from surveillance cameras placed in Gunaydin's hospital room during
    the month he was recovering from his injuries, before he was sent
    to prison. According to plaintiff lawyers, the police deliberately
    failed to submit the tapes within the required 24-hour limit and also
    did not obtain formal court permission to film the suspect.

    In still another "scandal" that made headlines in the Turkish media,
    police officials reportedly ignored standard forensic procedures
    by putting all the blood-stained clothes of the suspects into one
    container to be sent to the Ankara Criminal Laboratory, making it
    impossible to distinguish which individuals had the different victims'
    blood on their clothing.

    Near the close of last week's hearing, plaintiff lawyers requested that
    the police investigation files regarding Necati Aydin's brother-in-law,
    a pastor in Izmit whom Gunaydin had reportedly vowed to kill after
    the Malatya murders, be added to the Malatya case.

    International Monitoring

    In addition to relatives of the three victims, the January 14 hearing
    was observed by international press and television crews from Holland,
    Germany and the United States, as well as representatives from two
    non-governmental human rights organizations, a German diplomat and
    several leaders of the Turkish Alliance of Protestant Churches.

    After a flood of media reports late last year, the Turkish Interior
    Ministry on December 8 opened a judicial investigation into allegations
    of a seriously flawed investigation by Malatya's state prosecutors
    of alleged collusion of public officials in the murders.

    The following week, the Turkish Foreign Ministry confirmed that the
    United Nations' Special Rapporteur on Religious Freedom and Tolerance
    was actively monitoring the Malatya case.

    Dr. Zafer Uskul, head of the Turkish Parliament's Human Rights
    Investigation Commission and a member of the ruling Justice and
    Development Party, spoke briefly to the press after observing the
    first few hours of the January 14 hearing.

    "Everyone in Turkey has freedom of religion and belief," Uskul said.

    But he also admitted, "People in society need to be more tolerant.

    Particularly young people need to be educated on the subject of
    freedom of religion and belief."

    The court is scheduled to resume interrogation of the remaining four
    suspects on February 25.

    The Malatya massacre is the third in a chain of three deadly attacks
    against Turkey's tiny Christian minority in the past two years.

    Italian Catholic priest Fr. Andrea Santoro was shot to death while
    kneeling after mass in his church in Trabzon in February 2006,
    followed by the assassination of Armenian Christian editor Hrant Dink
    at the entrance of his newspaper office in Istanbul on January 19,
    2007. The assailants in both cases were teenagers.
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