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Journalist facing 3 trials for book about newspaper editor's murder

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  • Journalist facing 3 trials for book about newspaper editor's murder

    NEWS Press (English)
    April 22, 2010 Thursday


    Turkey : Journalist and writer facing three trials for book about
    newspaper editor's murder

    by: Reporters Without Borders



    Reporters Without Borders hopes the courts will dismiss all three of
    the prosecutions brought against Turkish writer and investigative
    journalist Nedim Sener for his book about the role of intelligence
    failures in the 2007 murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
    and instead make more of an effort to shed light on the Dink murder
    itself.

    Justice is being delayed in the Dink case while the judicial
    authorities devote their energy to secondary charges against
    journalists that are completely unjustified. As result of just one
    book, entitled "The Dink Murder and the Intelligence Lies," Sener is
    facing a possible combined sentence of 32 years in prison in three
    trials, one of which began already and another will start on 28 April.

    "The charges against Nedim Sener will continue to be premature and
    unjustified until the judicial authorities have shed light on all the
    circumstances surrounding Hrant Dink's murder and until the government
    and police officials involved in his murder are properly
    investigated," Reporters Without Borders said. "We call for the
    withdrawal of all the chargers against Sener, who just wanted to end
    the impunity that has gone one for three years in the Dink case." The
    press freedom organisation also calls for the withdrawal of all
    charges against Kemal Göktas, who is facing a possible five-year jail
    sentence in connection with his book "Hrant Dink murder: media,
    justice and state," in which he looks at the role of the state and the
    judicial authorities in Dink's murder.

    Sener has not so far been detained and is trying as best he can to
    continue his work as a journalist. Reporters Without Borders hopes
    that the verdicts that are issued in the coming days are fair and
    unbiased.

    Sener is facing a possible eight-year jail term for the charges of
    "insulting a state official," "violating the confidentiality of
    private correspondence" and "trying to influence the outcome of a
    trial" that have been brought against him before an Istanbul criminal
    court. These charges relate above all to Sener's suggestion in his
    book that, before Dink's murder, Ali Fuat Yilmazer, the head of the
    general intelligence section of police intelligence, suppressed a
    report about threats against Dink instead of circulating it to his
    superiors, as required by established procedure.

    During a hearing on 15 April, Sener testified in court that he did not
    intend in any way to interfere in the judicial investigation into the
    Dink murder and that he wrote in his book with the sole intention of
    shedding light on the murder.

    In the second case against him, Sener will be tried before an Istanbul
    court of assizes on charges of "obtaining classified documents" and,
    by publishing them, "exposing an official who combats terrorism to the
    action of a terrorist organisation." The charges carry a possible
    20-year sentence.

    In the third case, to be heard before a criminal court in the Istanbul
    district of Bakirkoy, Sener is facing a possible four-and-a-half-year
    sentence for violating a publication ban.

    A Turkish journalist of Armenian origin who advocated reconciliation
    between Turks and Armenians, Dink was gunned down on 19 January 2007
    on an Istanbul street outside the newspaper he founded and edited,
    Agos. His articles called for recognition of the Armenian genocide, a
    highly charged issue in Turkey. But despite the tension and despite
    receiving repeated threats from far-right groups, Dink always refused
    to leave Turkey.
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