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Malatya, Dink Murders Still Clouded In Mystery

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  • Malatya, Dink Murders Still Clouded In Mystery

    MALATYA, DINK MURDERS STILL CLOUDED IN MYSTERY

    Today's Zaman
    26.02.2008

    Co-plaintiff lawyers arrive at the BeÅ~_iktaÅ~_ courthouse for the
    trial of Hrant Dink murder suspects.

    Turkey saw hearings for two separate but related crimes yesterday
    as the third trial in the murder of an ethnic Armenian journalist in
    Ä°stanbul and the suspects of the murders of three Bible publishers
    in Malatya resumed yesterday, but neither trial has been a source of
    encouragement for those hoping to see justice done in the end.

    The two cases seem to be inherently related in many respects. In both
    cases, the police have been accused of trying to obscure evidence to
    protect the suspects and even of having links to the assailants. In
    the case of Hrant Dink, an Armenian Turkish journalist, one of the
    prime suspects is a known ex-police informant. The European Union
    and international rights groups are monitoring both cases closely.

    With regard to the previous hearing in the trial of the Dink murder
    suspects, "It's clear that police officers and security services
    knew about the plans of these guys, but they didn't act," said Joost
    Lagendijk, the co-chairman of the Turkey-EU Joint Parliamentary
    Commission.

    Although both murders initially appeared to be hate crimes, an
    investigation into a neo-nationalist gang known as Ergenekon,
    with access to power centers in the military and state apparatus,
    showed that the group might be behind both of the attacks, intended
    to create chaos in the country and lay the groundwork for an eventual
    coup d'état to overthrow the government.

    Security was tight outside the BeÅ~_iktaÅ~_ courthouse ahead of the
    trial of Dink's murder suspects. Police put up barriers around the
    building and set up checkpoints to search individuals entering the
    building as well as check their identification documents.

    Civilian automobiles were not allowed to enter the courthouse's
    parking lot.

    Dink was gunned down in broad daylight on Jan. 19, 2007 in front
    of the headquarters of bilingual Armenian weekly Agos, where he was
    editor-in-chief. Following Dink's murder, many reports suggested that
    the police were tipped off about the planned assassination more than
    once prior to his execution yet failed to prevent it.

    A group of protestors calling themselves "Friends of Hrant" gathered
    at BeÅ~_iktaÅ~_ Square ahead of the trial. The group, holding
    posters of Dink and chanting slogans demanding justice for the slain
    journalist, also issued a statement to the press. "We want something
    very simple. We want something that nobody would object to. We want
    justice," said singer Å~^evval Sam, reading the statement on behalf
    of the group.

    The group reiterated the demands of the Dink family and the attorneys
    representing the plaintiffs, who have been saying that the murder has
    not been properly investigated. The co-plaintiff lawyers say some of
    the evidence has been hidden or destroyed.

    They have also claimed that information vital to the course of the
    investigation had been held back by the police from the prosecution
    and the court in what seems to be an attempt to protect the suspects.

    Nineteen suspects, including Dink's suspected killer, 17-year-old
    O.S., and an ultranationalist youth charged with planning the crime,
    went on trial in July of 2007 for organizing the murder at the 14th
    High Criminal Court in Ä°stanbul's BeÅ~_iktaÅ~_ district.

    The trial is being held behind closed doors because O.S. was a minor
    at the time of the murder.

    Since the third hearing in the trial, held on Feb. 12, all sessions
    in the trial are being recorded by cameras set up in the courtroom,
    a first in Turkish judicial history. The implementation began when
    attorneys requested audiovisual recording, citing attempts of security
    officers to obscure evidence during the second hearing of the trial.

    During the second hearing of the trial's suspects, O.S. expressed
    "regret" for the killing in his testimony.

    "I was forced to do this job. I shot Dink out of fear without even
    understanding how it happened. I was at my uncle's place when I
    came to my senses. I could not sleep the entire night. I regret it;
    I didn't know he had a family. I wouldn't have done it if I had known,"
    he said in his testimony.

    Malatya case adjourned until March

    The third hearing of the trial in the murder of three Christians,
    one of them a German citizen, in the eastern Turkish province of
    Malatya last year convened at the Malatya 3rd High Criminal Court at
    9 a.m. yesterday.

    Lawyers in the case demanded that the hearing be recorded with
    visual and audio devices, a demand the court rejected. After the
    rejection of the request, the lawyers this time asked that the judge
    be removed, saying that the court's impartiality and independence
    was now jeopardized by the denial.

    The court adjourned the case until March 17, 2008 to review the
    request.

    Malatya victim Tilman Ekkehart Geske's wife, Suzanne Geske, and
    Necati Aydın's wife, Å~^emse Aydın, as well as chief suspect Emre
    Gunaydın's father, Mustafa Gunaydın, attended the hearing.

    The suspects were brought to the courthouse from the Malatya prison
    by special security units.

    The five suspects currently under arrest are being charged with setting
    up an armed terrorist organization, committing more than one homicide
    as part of the activities of the terrorist organization, trespassing
    and aiding and abetting an armed terrorist organization. Gunaydın is
    additionally being charged with having masterminded the murders. The
    prosecutor is seeking three life sentences for each of the five
    suspects. The other two are facing charges of aiding and abetting an
    armed terrorist organization.

    Murders at Zirve Publishing House

    On April 18, 2007, Christian Turks Necati Aydın and Ugur Yuksel and
    Christian German national Tilman Geske were tied to their chairs,
    stabbed and tortured at the Zirve Publishing House before their
    throats were slit.

    The publishing house they worked for printed Bibles and Christian
    literature. The killings drew international condemnation and added
    to Western concerns about whether Turkey can protect its religious
    minorities.

    --Boundary_(ID_LqjKnuug2Xxh CCsJqPET6g)--
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