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Turkish soldiers sentenced over Armenian murder

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  • Turkish soldiers sentenced over Armenian murder

    Agence France Presse
    June 2, 2011 Thursday 1:47 PM GMT


    Turkish soldiers sentenced over Armenian murder

    ANKARA, June 2 2011


    A Turkish court Thursday handed down jail terms of between four and
    six months to a group of paramilitary policemen for negligence over
    the 2007 murder of a prominent ethnic Armenian journalist.

    It was the first time state officials had been sentenced over the
    killing of Hrant Dink, which sent shockwaves through Turkey when it
    emerged that both police and paramilitary forces knew of an
    assassination plot but failed to act.

    A colonel and five subordinates who held key posts in the coastal city
    of Trabzon when a group of local youths hatched the plot were
    sentenced by a court in the Black Sea port, Anatolia news agency said.

    Two other soldiers were acquitted, the agency reported.

    The sentences were the heaviest that the tribunal could impose and
    lawyers for Dink's family expressed frustration that the case was not
    heard by a more senior court.

    "The trial could have taken place at a court dealing with heavy
    crimes. But infortunately, this did not happen despite all our
    efforts," attorney Fethiye Cetin told AFP.

    The convicts will remain at large until the appeals court confirms
    their sentences, she added.

    A leading figure of Turkey's tiny Armenian minority, the 52-year-old
    Dink was shot dead on January 19, 2007, outside the office of his Agos
    newspaper in central Istanbul.

    Prosecutors say police received intelligence as early as 2006 of a
    plot to kill Dink which had been organised in Trabzon, home to 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 over
    their bloody past, but nationalists hated him for using the genocide
    label for the massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire, which
    Ankara fiercely rejects.

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

    The case is seen as a test for Ankara's resolve to eliminate the "deep
    state" -- a term used to describe security forces acting outside the
    law to preserve what they consider Turkey's best interests.

    Lawyers for Dink's family suspect the gunman was encouraged and
    protected by elements of the "deep state" but their efforts to put
    more officials 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.

    Dink had won many hearts in Turkey with his message of peace and more
    than 100,000 people marched at his funeral.

    su-sft/co


    From: Baghdasarian
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