Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey took no heed of European Court's verdict - Dink family lawyer

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey took no heed of European Court's verdict - Dink family lawyer

    Turkey took no heed of European Court's verdict, Dink family's lawyer
    told the CoE Committee of Ministers

    armradio.am
    15.06.2012 14:12

    Dink family's lawyer Fethiye Çetin penned a letter to the Committee of
    Ministers of the Council of Europe, arguing that the Turkish
    government had failed to implement any serious, concrete or frank
    steps to execute the verdict issued by the ECHR and that it rewarded
    the responsible parties by promoting rather than trying them in a
    court of law, bianet.org reports.

    The Turkish government updated its action plan dating to June 27, 2011
    once again on Oct. 19, 2011 due to the finalization of the European
    Court's verdict on Dec. 14, 2010, she said, adding that both action
    plans included contemporary developments under the titles of
    independent and general measures and ongoing trials rather than the
    verdict's execution.

    "The written contents of the government's action plan clearly indicate
    they took no concrete or serious steps to execute the verdict. The
    government did not attempt anything positive since the time of the
    last action plan either," Fethiye Çetin said.

    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, the chief editor of the
    Armenian weekly Agos, was shot dead on Jan. 19, 2007 in broad daylight
    before his office in Istanbul's Şişli district.

    "The[action plan elucidated at length over measures allegedly taken,
    ongoing trials and investigations not yet complete, but it divulged no
    concrete information over the execution of the European Court's
    verdict on Dink or a renewal of the trial," Çetin said in her letter.

    "The government did not choose to opt for remission to execute the
    verdict, failed to bring those responsible before justice and
    continued its rhetoric and actions intended to pave the way for new
    violations by reproducing the same structure that spawned the
    violations in the first place," she said.

    The ECHR had convicted Turkey of violating the second article of the
    European Convention on Human Rights over the right to life, the 10th
    article on the freedom of speech and the 13th article over the right
    to an effective remedy in the lawsuit filed by the Dink family.

    A court had sentenced Dink's murderer Ogün Samast to a total of 22
    years and 10 months in prison on charges of "premeditated murder" and
    "possession of unlicensed weapons."Instigator Yasin Hayal also
    received a life sentence, while Erhan Tuncel was acquitted. All the
    defendants, however, were acquitted of charges of membership in an
    illegal organization due to lack of evidence, and a number of
    officials implicated in the affair also received promotions.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X