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ISTANBUL: Dink murder case should go back to square one - Aslan

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  • ISTANBUL: Dink murder case should go back to square one - Aslan

    Sunday's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 5 2012


    Dink murder case should go back to square one, says journalist Aslan


    5 February 2012 / FATÄ°H UÄ?UR, Ä°STANBUL
    Considering the fact that the final court ruling in the murder case of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in 2007 has not fulfilled the
    public's sense of justice, Bugün daily Ankara representative Adem
    Yavuz Arslan said the investigation into the murder case of Dink
    should be taken back to square one and this time handled with
    determination to thoroughly resolve the case.
    `What actually needs to be done now is to re-handle the Dink murder
    case as if the murder took place today, and to do this with
    determination to resolve it,' Arslan told Sunday's Zaman.

    The late editor-in-chief of the Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, Dink was
    shot dead in broad daylight on Jan. 19, 2007, by an ultranationalist
    teenager outside the offices of his newspaper in Ä°stanbul. The gunman,
    Ogün Samast, and 18 others were brought to trial. The investigation
    into his murder was stalled, but the suspected perpetrator and his
    accomplices were put on trial. However, the final ruling of the
    Ä°stanbul 14th High Criminal Court issued last month failed to please
    those expecting justice to be served. During the process, lawyers for
    the Dink family and the co-plaintiffs in the case presented evidence
    indicating that Samast did not act alone. Samast stood trial in a
    juvenile court because he was a minor at the time of the murder. He
    was recently sentenced to 22 years, 10 months in prison by the court.
    In a separate trial, two gendarmerie officers were convicted on
    charges of dereliction of duty in the run-up to the Dink murder.

    Another suspect, Yasin Hayal, was given life in prison for inciting
    Samast to murder. However, Erhan Tuncel, who worked as an informant
    for the Trabzon Police Department, was found not guilty of
    masterminding the murder. The prosecution believes the killers are
    affiliated with the Ergenekon network, a shadowy crime network that
    has alleged links within the state, whose suspected members are
    currently standing trial on charges of plotting to overthrow the
    government.

    Arslan is also the author of the book, `Bi Ermeni Var: Dink
    Operasyonunun Å?ifreleri' (There's this Armenian: The Codes of the Dink
    Operation), which was published last year seeking to shed light on
    some of the shady aspects surrounding Dink's murder. According to
    Arslan, the court made its final ruling exactly in line with the
    expectations of those who masterminded Dink's murder, which he
    described as the indisputable success of Ergenekon. `Although five
    years have passed since the murder, the big brothers, I mean the real
    masterminds of the murder, could not be reached. Those who planned and
    masterminded the murder and prepared the groundwork for it were not
    even investigated. Such a professionally committed murder has been
    covered up by attributing it to several boys who were playing football
    on a field. The court's ruling has confirmed how Ergenekon is still
    very strong,' said Arslan.

    Considering the fact that the prosecutor conducting the investigation
    into the assassination of Dink, Hikmet Usta, announced his opinion
    last September as to who masterminded the assassination and said the
    murder was committed by Ergenekon's cell in the Black Sea province of
    Trabzon, Arslan commented on the court ignoring the prosecutor's
    opinion by not finding any connection to an organized gang in the Dink
    murder and pointed out some misfortunes during the trial.

    `One of the misfortunes of this case was the replacement of
    prosecutors and judges during the trial. The former presiding judge of
    the case [Erkan Ã?anak] was taken off the case due to his alleged
    relations with drug barons. The former prosecutor of the case was also
    taken off the case for another reason. The name of this prosecutor was
    on the list of members of the judiciary who would benefit from the
    Sledgehammer coup case. This detail is important and because of this,
    both the court and the prosecutor's office skillfully warded off
    attempts to deepen the case during the five-year-long trial. They
    either rejected such attempts or left them to time. Another misfortune
    was the conduct of another operation over the Dink murder. Ergenekon
    circles diverted our attention to another point. They diverted our
    attention to other points that hypnotized us and made us fail to see
    the obvious,' explained Arslan.

    Elaborating on the point Ergenekon circles tried to attract the
    public's attention to, he said these circles tried to undermine those
    carrying out the Ergenekon investigation and damage the prestige of
    the court hearing the Ergenekon trial.

    `Unfortunately, they have been successful in their attempts to a
    certain extent. So, everyone had their own `gang' and suspects they
    wanted to see in that gang. Or else, it is very obvious that the Hrant
    Dink murder is an operation included in the Cage Operation Action
    Plan,' he said.

    The Cage Operation Action Plan is an alleged military plot to
    intimidate the country's non-Muslim population by assassinating some
    of their prominent community figures. It was uncovered by the Taraf
    daily in late 2009. The Cage plan was detailed on a CD seized in 2009
    from the office of retired Maj. Levent BektaÅ?, who was arrested in
    April 2009 for suspected links to a large cache of munitions buried in
    İstanbul's Poyrazköy area. That discovery came as part of an
    investigation into Ergenekon. The CD exposed the group's plans to
    assassinate prominent Turkish non-Muslim figures and place the blame
    for the killings on the Justice and Development Party (AK Party). The
    desired result was an increase in internal and external pressure on
    the party, leading to diminishing public support for the government.

    The Cage plan called the killings of Dink, Catholic priest Father
    Andrea Santoro and three Christians in Malatya an `operation.'
    According to the police report, the mastermind behind the Cage plan
    was Ä°brahim Å?ahin, the former deputy chief of the National Police
    Department's Special Operations Unit.

    `When we look at the murder of Dink in general and its planning in
    Trabzon and Ä°stanbul, we see the signs of Cage Operation Action Plan.
    Let's remember those days. In 2003 and the ensuing period, there was a
    debate that could not be well understood on missionary activities and
    loss of religion. These debates culminated in 2004 and 2005. ¦ The
    necessary environment [for the attacks on non-Muslims] was prepared in
    this way. There was an aim to create a neo-nationalist front against
    the AK Party. There was a need to create a public unease over the
    prospects of losing religion. When we look at the murder of Father
    Santaro [in Trabzon in 2006], Hrant Dink and the killing of three
    Christians in Malatya [in 2007], we see that the perpetrators were all
    influenced by this wave. They attacked churches and killed
    missionaries out of fear that religion [Islam] was slipping from the
    hands of the nation. In brief, in order to understand Dink's murder
    and its goal, we need to look at the game that has been skillfully
    played since 2003,' Arslan said.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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