Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Security Forces At Fault Over Ethnic Armenian's Murder: Report

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

  • Security Forces At Fault Over Ethnic Armenian's Murder: Report

    SECURITY FORCES AT FAULT OVER ETHNIC ARMENIAN'S MURDER: REPORT

    Agence France Presse -- English
    July 23, 2008 Wednesday 1:48 PM GMT

    A Turkish parliamentary commission Wednesday accused security forces
    of "negligence" for failing to act on intelligence and prevent the
    murder last year of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

    The charge came in a non-binding report by a sub-committee of the
    parliament Human Rights Commission after a nine-month investigation
    into the 2007 murder.

    The report, without giving names, says police and the paramilitary
    gendarmerie, which polices rural parts of Turkey, failed to "properly
    investigate and evaluate" a tip on a plot to kill Dink.

    "Dink lost his life ... because the authorities did not take the
    requisite measures due to negligence by those in charge at all levels,"
    it said.

    Dink, 52, reviled by Turkish nationalists for describing the World
    War I massacre of Armenians a genocide, was shot dead on January 19,
    2007 outside the offices of his Agos newspaper in central Istanbul.

    Self-confessed gunman Ogun Samast, 17 at the time of the murder,
    and 18 accomplices went on trial in Istanbul last year.

    The charge sheet says police received intelligence as early as 2006
    of a plot to kill Dink, organised in the northern city of Trabzon,
    Samast's hometown.

    Only four members of the securtity forces have so far been indicted
    in connection with the murder.

    Two of them -- soldiers working at the Trabzon gendarmerie intelligence
    department -- testified in court in March that they had passed on
    to their superiors information of a plot to kill Dink, but said no
    action was taken.

    They accused their superiors of fabricating documents after the murder
    to create the impression they had no prior knowledge of the plot.

    Two policemen are on trial in the northern city of Samsun for their
    part in a scandal that erupted when it was revealed that security
    forces posed for smiling "souvenir" pictures with the gunman after
    he was captured there a day after the murder.

    The investigation is seen as a test of Ankara's resolve to eliminate
    the "deep state" -- a term used to describe security forces acting
    outside the law to preserve what they consider Turkey's best interests.
Working...
X