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Doubts remain after Dink murder trial latest hearing - RSF

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  • Doubts remain after Dink murder trial latest hearing - RSF

    Reporters Sans Frontieres (France)
    press release
    Oct 14 2009


    Doubts remain after Turkish-Armenian editor murder trial latest hearing -
    RSF



    Text of report in English by Paris-based media freedom organization
    Reporters Sans Frontieres on 14 October

    Essential issues were again left unaddressed at the 11th hearing on 12
    October in the trial of the newspaper editor Hrant Dink's alleged killers
    before an Istanbul court. A Turkish journalist of Armenian origin, Dink was
    gunned down outside his newspaper in Istanbul on 19 January 2007.

    "In hearing after hearing, the same fundamental questions remain, including
    the existence of a political will at the highest level to expose the truth
    in a case whose ramifications could turn it into a major government
    scandal," Reporters Without Borders said. "But one thing is now clearly
    established, namely the danger that the ultranationalist discourse and
    ideology of hate pose to Turkish society in its entirety. This danger has
    clearly not gone away."

    The press freedom organization added: "This is also evidenced by the fact
    that in the past four years, some 200 Turkish intellectuals, journalists,
    publishers and dissidents have been tried under criminal code article 301 on
    charges of humiliating Turkish identity or insulting state institutions,
    meaning the army, police and judicial system."

    For the first time since the start of the trial in July 2007, the alleged
    murder weapon was displayed in court. Judge Erkan Canak showed it to the
    defendants. Two of them, Ogun Samast, the youth who has confessed to
    shooting Dink, and Yasin Hayal, who allegedly supplied him with the gun,
    said they recognized it.

    During the hearing, lawyers representing the Dink family reiterated their
    concern about the murkier aspects of the case. They asked for the case to be
    linked to two other ongoing investigations and said evidence from these two
    other investigations should be shared with the Dink trial. One is the
    investigation into the ultranationalist conspiracy known as Ergenekon, and
    the other is the investigation into the 2007 murder of three Protestant
    missionaries in the eastern city of Malatya.

    One of the Dink family lawyers, Fethiye Cetin, asked for the court to be
    given the testimony of one of the Ergenekon defendants, Sevgi Erenerol, a
    young woman who is the spokesperson of the (ultranationalist) Turkish
    Orthodox Church. Erenerol, who supported the Article 301 prosecutions
    brought against Dink, mentioned meetings with senior armed forces personnel
    at which the presence of Protestant missionaries in Turkey was referred to
    as a "danger."

    The prosecutors in charge of the Ergenekon case are already supposed to
    provide Judge Canak with documents concerning another of the defendants,
    Durmus Ali Ozoglu, whose statements tend to confirm the existence of a plan
    to "psychologically destabilise" Turkey.

    It is for investigating the Ergenekon conspiracy and the failure of the
    security forces to prevent Dink's murder that Nedim Sener, a journalist with
    the daily Milliyet, is being prosecuted over an article published in
    February and a book entitled "The Dink murder and Intelligence Agency Lies."

    He is facing a possible 32-year jail sentence (more than the 20-year terms
    that Dink's alleged murderers could get) on charges of publishing
    confidential information, trying to pervert the course of justice, insulting
    a police officer and three senior intelligence officers and exposing the
    intelligence officers to "attacks by terrorist organizations."

    The Dink family lawyers also insisted during this hearing on the need to
    continue efforts to identify all the people involved in the Dink murder. In
    particular, they called for an investigation into the statements made to a
    special parliamentary commission by the current head of intelligence in
    Ankara, Ramazan Akyurek, who used to be police chief in Trabzon, the city
    where most of the defendants come from. Akyurek told the commission he had
    been aware of a plan to kill Dink.

    During this hearing, the US software and internet company Microsoft was
    asked to provide the court with transcripts of the MSN Messenger
    conversations of one of the defendants, Erhan Tuncel, who was a Trabzon
    police informer.

    Several international observers attended the hearing, including Vincent
    Niore, Alexandre Couyoumdjian and Mathieu Brochier, three Paris Bar
    Association lawyers who are following the trial at the behest of Bar
    President Christian Charriere-Bournazel. It was the third consecutive
    hearing they have attended. They said their Paris Bar Association mandate to
    observe the trial and support the Dink family and its lawyers has been
    extended until 2011.

    In response to a journalist's question, they said they have not been
    received by the head of the Istanbul Bar Association, Muammer Aydin, who has
    said in the past that he is not happy with the interest the Paris Bar
    Association is taking in the trial as it "means that too much importance is
    being attached to Hrant Dink's Armenian identity."

    The observers also included European Parliament member Helene Flautre, who
    is joint chairperson of the Turkey-EU mixed commission, Ali Yurttagul, an
    adviser to the European Greens, Eugene Schoulgin, international secretary of
    International PEN, and two representatives of Norwegian PEN, Lin Stensrud
    and Trine Kleven.
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