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ANKARA: Officers Were Silenced By Colonel In Dink Murder Case

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  • ANKARA: Officers Were Silenced By Colonel In Dink Murder Case

    OFFICERS WERE SILENCED BY COLONEL IN DINK MURDER CASE

    Zaman Online
    July 26 2008
    Turkey

    The testimony of an ex-gendarmerie officer has indicated that former
    Trabzon Gendarmerie Commander Col. Ali Oz disregarded information
    related to the murder of Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink
    prior to the assassination.

    Retired Lt. Col. Ali Oguz Caglar, former Trabzon gendarmerie public
    security branch director, yesterday confirmed the testimonies of two
    gendarmes who said they had informed their superior officer, Col. Oz,
    but had given false statements during the course of the investigation
    under pressure from Oz. Caglar said they could not understand why Oz
    was disinterested in the information. "His orders were definite. We did
    not dare challenge him," Caglar said in his deposition at the Ankara
    Second Criminal Court of Peace after a court in Trabzon ordered him
    to testify.

    Facing an investigation over suspicions of "hiding information and
    failing to act" on reports Dink was in danger, Oz gave his testimony
    on July 21 and responded by stating either "I don't remember" or
    "I don't know them" when asked about the intelligence information
    related to Dink's murder and the two gendarmes who said they had
    informed him about the murder.

    Gendarmes Okan Å~^imÅ~_ek and Veysel Å~^ahin testified that they
    knew about the plot to kill Dink six months before the murder took
    place and recounted that they had informed Gendarmerie Intelligence
    Director Capt. Metin Yıldız, who, in turn, informed Col. Oz. The two
    officers testified that Oz did nothing upon receiving the information.

    Confident about his statement, Caglar stated at court: "Two of our
    intelligence officers worked hard to obtain for me highly credible
    information that the murder was likely to happen, and they passed the
    information to the troop commander, Col. Ali Oz, but the commander,
    either knowingly or unknowingly, did not proceed with the procedures
    he had to go through after obtaining such information. Gendarme
    Sgt. Å~^ahin and Sgt. Å~^imÅ~_ek were sincere in their most recent
    testimony."

    Caglar said that upon receiving the intelligence, Col. Oz had said,
    "Let's talk about this later," and the matter was not discussed
    again. People who attended the briefing where the intelligence
    was discussed later debated about "how such information can be
    disregarded."

    Caglar also said, as the news of Dink's murder was revealed on
    television on Jan. 19 of last year, that Col. Oz had told them in
    the next briefing that informant CoÅ~_kun Ä°gci should be contacted
    and silenced.

    Ä°gci, who testified for the first time on July 7, is the uncle of
    murder suspect Yasin Hayal. Ä°gci said he tried to prevent Hayal from
    murdering Dink but could not, so he informed officials and gendarmerie
    officials, who told him that they had already been monitoring Hayal.

    Caglar said he told provincial intelligence chief Metin Yıldız that
    he would tell the truth if he was asked and that he was not invited
    into the briefings from then on. Caglar named another gendarmerie
    officer, Husamettin Polat, who had said he would tell the truth,
    whereupon he was also excluded from the briefings.

    Dink was gunned down by a teenager outside his newspaper's Ä°stanbul
    office in January 2007, but the ensuing investigation has been highly
    controversial. The investigation made it obvious that the young man
    hadn't acted alone but was in fact driven by a group of people whom
    he called older brothers who had plotted for more than a year.

    In addition to shady links between the suspects and security
    institutions, lawyers representing the Dink family at various times
    have accused the police of destroying vital evidence and concealing
    crucial information from the court and the prosecution.

    --Boundary_(ID_QkqDJfB/nP1pgTDpWyCTU A)--
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