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ANKARA: After 8 years, sociologist Selek in the clear

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  • ANKARA: After 8 years, sociologist Selek in the clear

    The New Anatolian / Ankara
    June 9 2006


    After 8 years, sociologist Selek in the clear



    Charges were dropped yesterday against sociologist Pinar Selek over a
    deadly blast in Istanbul's spice market eight years ago.

    Selek, along with 15 others, has been accused of being responsible
    for a blast that claimed the lives of seven people and injured 127
    others in 1998. She was charged under article 125 of the TCK and
    faced a life sentence.

    The court ruled yesterday to drop charges of aiding and abetting the
    terrorist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) against Selek, due to the
    statute of limitations. The court also dropped charges related to the
    blast, as the reason for the explosion is unknown.

    Charges against Selek and other defendants were widely debated when
    the indictment was released and an expert report argued that the
    explosion was caused, not by a bomb, but by a spark by a liquid
    petroleum gas cylinder in a nearby snack booth, but this argument, as
    well as the theory about Selek, failed to be supported by sufficient
    evidence.

    The court also ruled for 36 years of imprisonment for three other
    suspects on charges of murder on behalf of the PKK.

    Selek was also claimed to be a close aide to Abdullah Ocalan, leader
    of the PKK, and both the media and non-governmental organizations
    divided into two camps supporting and condemning her.

    Her case received great local and international scrutiny as her
    supporters claim that charges against her were filed due to her
    reluctance to cooperate with the police regarding the names of the
    PKK members she interviewed in the course of academic research.

    Selek also claimed that she has been subject to intense torture
    during questioning by the police.

    Arabaslik: Court acquits reporter of 'interference in judiciary'
    charges

    Also yesterday, a court dropped two cases of a journalist charged
    with interfering in the judicial process in two articles over a
    controversial Armenian conference held last year amidst severe
    protests from ultranationalist groups.

    Journalist Murat Belge was tried upon a complaint from Kemal
    Kerincsiz, head of the Grand Lawyers Association, a group well-known
    for its efforts against journalists and intellectual figures
    advocating minority rights.

    Along with Belge, Kerincsiz filed complaints with the Bagcilar Public
    Prosecutor's Office against four other journalists on similar
    charges, but the court released the four on grounds that the
    complaint didn't come in time, and separated the file of Belge.

    The five journalists were facing prison terms of up to 10 years
    apiece.

    Belge was also among those supporting Selek.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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