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Turkish Minister Urges Probe Into Police Role In Dink's Murder

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  • Turkish Minister Urges Probe Into Police Role In Dink's Murder

    TURKISH MINISTER URGES PROBE INTO POLICE ROLE IN DINK'S MURDER

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Jan 21 2008

    Turkey's justice minister has called for a "serious" probe into claims
    that security forces were involved in the murder last year of ethnic
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

    "Certain members of the security forces are said to be linked to
    this murder," Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin said in an interview
    published Monday in the daily Sabah. "Every allegation must be
    considered a tip-off and seriously investigated," he said.

    Thousands marked the first anniversary of Dink's assassination on
    Saturday with protestors accusing the authorities of ignoring the
    alleged protection the suspected gunman and his associates received
    from the police.

    "If what they (the police) did was a crime, they must be definitely
    punished," the minister said.

    Dink's murder prompted fresh calls for the elimination of the "deep
    state" -- a term used to describe security forces acting outside the
    law to preserve what they consider Turkey's best interests. Lawyers
    for Dink's family say the police withheld and destroyed evidence to
    cover up the murder, including footage from a bank security camera in
    downtown Istanbul near where Dink was gunned down on January 19, 2007.

    The charge sheet says police received intelligence as early as 2006
    of a plot to kill Dink organized in the northern city of Trabzon,
    home of self-confessed gunman Ogun Samast, 17, and most of his 18
    alleged accomplices currently on trial. A taped telephone conversation
    between a policeman and a suspect shortly after the killing suggests
    the officer knew of the plot in advance. The tape, leaked to the
    media last year, includes degrading comments about Dink.

    Dink, 52, campaigned for reconciliation between Turks and Armenians,
    but nationalists hated him for insisting the World War I massacres
    of Armenians under Ottoman rule was an act of genocide -- a label
    Ankara fiercely rejects. Only four members of the security forces
    have been indicted in connection with the murder, but face minor
    charges unrelated to the killing itself.

    Sahin also said a draft proposal to amend the controversial
    Article 301 of the Turkish penal code under which Dink was given
    a suspended six-month jail sentence for "denigrating Turkishness"
    would be submitted to parliament in the coming days. The law has
    been criticized as a threat to freedom of speech in Turkey, which is
    engaged in membership talks with the European Union.

    Police said that around 8,000 people had gathered Saturday outside
    the central Istanbul offices of the bilingual Turkish Armenian weekly
    set up by Dink in 1996. With black and red banners carrying messages
    such as "We are all Armenians", those present included members of
    his family, personal friends, journalists, human rights campaigners
    and also ordinary members of the public.

    "I am here because we have lost one of Turkey's most beautiful souls,"
    said 47-year-old shopkeeper Mehmet Calik. "He was killed because he
    was Armenian but also because he spoke the language of truth. We are
    here to carry on his struggle."

    Turkish newspapers on Saturday were unanimous in calling for the
    authorities to "shed all possible light" on the assassination. "A year
    after his death, scandals and dozens of questions remain unanswered,"
    the daily Milliyet said on its front page, noting that "justice hasn't
    moved forward an inch" in shedding light on the affair.
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