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ANKARA: Gendarmerie Knew About Dink Murder Plot, Witness Testifies

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  • ANKARA: Gendarmerie Knew About Dink Murder Plot, Witness Testifies

    GENDARMERIE KNEW ABOUT DINK MURDER PLOT, WITNESS TESTIFIES

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 23 2008
    Turkey

    A witness has testified that at least two members of the gendarmerie
    force in Trabzon had been clearly warned beforehand of the killing
    of Hrant Dink last year.

    The trial of two gendarmerie officers on charges of dereliction
    of duty by failing to undertake necessary measures to prevent the
    murder of ethnic Armenian journalist Dink started in a Trabzon court
    on Monday. Gendarmerie intelligence officers Sgt. Maj. Okan Þ. and Spc.

    Sgt. Veysel Þahin are being accused of failing to act within the scope
    of their powers to prevent the murder of Dink, even though they had
    solid intelligence on the plot to assassinate the journalist months
    before the incident.

    Dink was shot by an extremist teenager on Jan. 19, 2007, outside the
    Agos weekly building, where he was the editor-in-chief, in Ýstanbul's
    Beyoðlu district. The ensuing investigation revealed that some of
    the suspects who were later found to be the masterminds of the murder
    had links to police officers.

    The first witness to testify in yesterday's trial was Coþkun Ýðci,
    the ex-husband of the aunt of Yasin Hayal, a prime suspect in the
    Dink murder investigation. Ýðci testified that he had notified the
    two gendarmerie officers at least two-and-a-half months ahead of the
    murder of his nephew's plans to shoot Dink.

    The witness said Hayal, who is currently in prison pending trial in
    the Dink murder, had told him openly about his plans for the murder.

    Ýðci stated that he informed the two gendarmerie officers of the
    plans to kill Dink about two-and-a-half to three months prior to the
    murder. He testified that Hayal and his friends told him about an
    earlier visit near Dink's house and the environs of the Agos weekly
    in Ýstanbul, which he relayed to the two gendarmerie officers now
    being tried. He said the two officers warned him not to talk to anyone
    about what he knew shortly after the assassination.

    "When I heard from Yasin Hayal that Hrant Dink was going to be
    killed I conveyed the information to friends in the gendarmerie
    about two-and-a-half to three months before the murder. I knew that
    both of the suspects were with the Trabzon gendarmerie intelligence
    unit. I did not see them for a while after tipping them off. The day
    after the murder, these two friends came to see me and they said they
    would like to talk to me. We met in Deðirmendere. They asked me not
    to mention that I knew about the plot and that I had told them of the
    murder plans. We met again one day after that. They repeated the same
    things from the day before and demanded that I not talk to anyone
    about the incident and not share any information," Ýðci testified.

    Ýðci said he had known both of the gendarmerie officers being tried
    since 2004. He noted that he had known Þahin as "Engin abi" and
    did not know the name of Okan Þ., referring to him only as "abi,"
    a Turkish word meaning older brother. Investigators of the Dink
    murder have also found that the group of ultranationalist youths who
    plotted the murder was organized in a similar hierarchy of "abi" and
    "buyuk abi," or brothers and big brothers.

    'He spoke to me of the murder plan very clearly'

    Ýðci testified about Hayal, stating: "He came to me and said, 'In
    Ýstanbul there is a journalist of Armenian origin. He runs a weekly
    newspaper called Agos. He writes articles in this newspaper and on
    the Internet that are insulting. We will kill this one.' And I asked:
    'How are you going to kill him? Do you have money or guns?' Then he
    told me they were going to travel to Ýstanbul and kill him and that
    they had made a blueprint of the area of his home and office. He also
    said he was not alone in this, but he did not tell me who these other
    people were."

    The witness said Hayal had YTL 300 and offered him the money to find
    him a gun.

    "And I told these two friends on trial about this gun issue. The
    gendarmerie officers asked me to take Hayal's YTL 300. The money was
    in 50 lira bills. I had written down the serial numbers of the bills.

    Later I asked the suspects what I should do with the money. They
    asked me to keep the money for a while. Yasin Hayal was calling me
    continuously asking me what I did with the money and if I had gotten
    him the gun yet. The officers were asking me to engage with him some
    more. Finally Yasin said: 'You took my money and spent it. Give me
    my money back or give me the gun.' So I explained the situation to
    the suspects here. They asked me to give the money back and so I did."

    In response to a question on whether he had contacted any public
    officials other than the two suspects, the witness said he had not.

    Lawyers demand merging of case files

    Meanwhile, Ergin Cinmen, an attorney for the co-plaintiffs, requested
    that the court rule the case outside its jurisdiction under Article
    83 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), which defines dereliction of duty
    by public officials as failing to take necessary measures despite
    having knowledge of what is being planned. He argued this was not a
    simple dereliction of duty case but a major offense.

    Cinmen said the offense falls under the jurisdiction of a higher
    criminal court and that it is outside the jurisdiction of the Trabzon
    2nd Peace Criminal Court. He requested that the case be merged with
    the murder trial of Dink in Ýstanbul because the Dink murder is an
    "equation with too many unknown variables."

    --Boundary_(ID_nu80/Lf8pKczW1HZg FNbtw)--
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