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Turkish Paramilitary Police Sentenced Over Hrant Dink Assassination

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  • Turkish Paramilitary Police Sentenced Over Hrant Dink Assassination

    TURKISH PARAMILITARY POLICE SENTENCED OVER HRANT DINK ASSASSINATION

    Radio France International RFI
    http://www.english.rfi.fr/asia-pacific/20110602-turkish-paramilitary-police-sentenced-over-hrant-dink-assassination
    France
    June 2 2011

    A Turkish court Thursday sentenced a group of paramilitary police to
    between four and six months in jail, for negligence in the case of
    the 2007 murder of ethnic-Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink.

    A colonel and five subordinates, who held key posts in the coastal
    city of Trabzon, were found to have known that a group of local youths
    planned the killing but done nothing to stop them.

    Two other soldiers were acquitted, the agency reported.

    The sentences were the first given to state officials over the 2007
    killing, and they were the heaviest that the tribunal could impose.

    Lawyers for Dink's family expressed frustration that the case was
    not heard by a more senior court.

    A leading figure in Turkey's tiny Armenian minority, Dink was shot
    dead outside the office of his Agos newspaper in central Istanbul.

    Prosecutors say police received intelligence about the plot as early
    as 2006.

    Trabzon was the home of the self-confessed gunman, aged 17 at the
    time of the murder, and 18 suspected accomplices, who remain on trial
    in Istanbul.

    Dink campaigned for reconciliation between Turks and Armenians but
    nationalists hated him for calling the massacres of Armenians under
    the Ottoman Empire genocide.

    Last September, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the
    Turkish authorities had failed to take adequate measures to protect
    Dink.

    Lawyers for Dink's family suspect the gunman was encouraged and
    protected by elements of the "deep state" - hardline nationalists
    in the military and civil service - but their efforts to have more
    officials put on trial have failed to bear fruit.

    They have accused police of withholding and destroying evidence to
    cover up the murder, including footage from a bank security camera
    in the street where the journalist was gunned down.

    More than 100,000 people marched at Dink's funeral.

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