ETHNIC ARMENIAN JOURNALIST'S MURDER TRIAL CONTINUES IN TURKEY
Earthtimes
Feb 11 2008
UK
Ankara - The trial of the 19 people charged in connection with the
murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink continued Monday,
with defendants refusing to answer the questions of lawyers engaged by
Dink's family, the NTV television station reported. "She has become
a saint," Erhan Tuncel told the court, referring disparagingly to
Dink's wife Rakel who was present in the court.
Tuncel said he had no bad intentions,saying he had called the police
after the murder but that Dink's lawyers were doing their best to
have him sentenced to a heavy prison term.
Tuncel was later accused by a fellow defendant of having "sold out"
his friends.
Dink, 53, was shot dead outside the Istanbul office of his Agos
newspaper in January. Oguz Samast was arrested soon after in the
Black Sea town of Samsun where he reportedly confessed to the killing.
Samast has been charged with murder, being a member of a terrorist
organization and carrying an unlicensed weapon and faces up to 42
years behind bars if found guilty.
On Monday Samast too refused to answer questions.
The other 18 people on trial face a variety of charges including
incitement to murder and forming a terrorist organization.
Dink's murder sparked a wave of anger and shock across Turkey with
tens of thousands of people attending his funeral in Istanbul.
There were also nationalist counter-protests, especially in Samast's
home town of Trabzon, against the way in which Dink's supporters
waved banners saying "we are all Armenians."
Dink was a hate figure for nationalists owing to his well-known
writings concerning the massacres of Armenians by Turks in 1915.
Dink said the massacres were a genocide that Turkey should acknowledge,
while the official line in Turkey is that while hundreds of thousands
of people were killed the deaths did not constitute a genocide.
Earlier on Monday a group of around 2,000 supporters of Hrant Dink
called for the murder to be investigated thoroughly.
"This is a test for democracy and Justice," actress Derya Alabora
told supporters waving placards saying "For Hrant. For Justice".
Lawyers for Dink's family attending the trial have complained that
the investigation into the murder did not look closely at how the
police had failed to act upon numerous warnings that Dink's life was
in danger.
Speaking outside the court, European Parliamentarian Joost Lagendijk
said it was imperative that the Turkish government act on its promises
to amend Article 301 of the criminal code, the same code that Dink
had been found guilty of "insulting Turkishness".
"We don't want any more statements from the government about changing
301. We want them to change it," Lagendijk said.
Earthtimes
Feb 11 2008
UK
Ankara - The trial of the 19 people charged in connection with the
murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink continued Monday,
with defendants refusing to answer the questions of lawyers engaged by
Dink's family, the NTV television station reported. "She has become
a saint," Erhan Tuncel told the court, referring disparagingly to
Dink's wife Rakel who was present in the court.
Tuncel said he had no bad intentions,saying he had called the police
after the murder but that Dink's lawyers were doing their best to
have him sentenced to a heavy prison term.
Tuncel was later accused by a fellow defendant of having "sold out"
his friends.
Dink, 53, was shot dead outside the Istanbul office of his Agos
newspaper in January. Oguz Samast was arrested soon after in the
Black Sea town of Samsun where he reportedly confessed to the killing.
Samast has been charged with murder, being a member of a terrorist
organization and carrying an unlicensed weapon and faces up to 42
years behind bars if found guilty.
On Monday Samast too refused to answer questions.
The other 18 people on trial face a variety of charges including
incitement to murder and forming a terrorist organization.
Dink's murder sparked a wave of anger and shock across Turkey with
tens of thousands of people attending his funeral in Istanbul.
There were also nationalist counter-protests, especially in Samast's
home town of Trabzon, against the way in which Dink's supporters
waved banners saying "we are all Armenians."
Dink was a hate figure for nationalists owing to his well-known
writings concerning the massacres of Armenians by Turks in 1915.
Dink said the massacres were a genocide that Turkey should acknowledge,
while the official line in Turkey is that while hundreds of thousands
of people were killed the deaths did not constitute a genocide.
Earlier on Monday a group of around 2,000 supporters of Hrant Dink
called for the murder to be investigated thoroughly.
"This is a test for democracy and Justice," actress Derya Alabora
told supporters waving placards saying "For Hrant. For Justice".
Lawyers for Dink's family attending the trial have complained that
the investigation into the murder did not look closely at how the
police had failed to act upon numerous warnings that Dink's life was
in danger.
Speaking outside the court, European Parliamentarian Joost Lagendijk
said it was imperative that the Turkish government act on its promises
to amend Article 301 of the criminal code, the same code that Dink
had been found guilty of "insulting Turkishness".
"We don't want any more statements from the government about changing
301. We want them to change it," Lagendijk said.