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ANKARA: Dink Family Lawyers To Appeal To ECHR

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  • ANKARA: Dink Family Lawyers To Appeal To ECHR

    DINK FAMILY LAWYERS TO APPEAL TO ECHR
    Erol Onderoðlu

    BIA
    March 11 2008
    Turkey

    After a court has found the Trabzon police innocent of gross
    negligence, Dink family lawyers are preparing to appeal to the ECHR.

    The RSF has called for the prosecution of all those responsible.

    It has been more than a year now that journalist Hrant Dink, editor
    of the weekly Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, was gunned down and
    killed in front of his office in Istanbul on 19 January 2007.

    The investigation of the murder has been unsatisfactory; for instance,
    there is evidence that the Trabzon police was told many times of the
    planned murder, but failed to act. However, so far only the suspected
    gunman and a group of mostly young men involved in the planning of
    the murder have been put on trial, as well as two gendarmerie officers
    in Trabzon.

    Trabzon police "not negligent" On 10 January of this year, the Chief
    Public Prosecution in Trabzon, in northeastern Turkey, decided not
    to prosecute seven police officers of the Trabzon police force for
    gross negligence in the murder of Hrant Dink.

    Following the objection of lawyers of the Dink family, the case was
    taken to the Rize Heavy Penal Court. It has rejected the objection
    of the lawyers.

    Bahri Bayram Belen, one of the lawyers for the Dink family and a
    joint attorney in the murder trial, told bianet that they have not yet
    been officially informed of the decision, but that they will appeal
    to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) as soon as possible.

    Police "turned a blind eye" He said, "Some officers in the Trabzon
    police, gendarmerie and related intelligence units turned a blind
    eye to [information telling them about a planned murder] and caused
    Hrant Dink's death. This case is very important for us. We had even
    demanded that the case of the two gendarmerie officers being tried
    in Trabzon be joined with this case."

    According to the decree of the Rize court, there will be no trial
    against former intelligence chief Engin Dinc, former anti-terrorism
    chief Yahya Ozturk or five other police officers from the Trabzon
    police department for obscuring evidence, gross negligence and
    protecting criminals.

    Based on witness accounts, the Dink family had filed a criminal
    complaint with the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecution. However, the
    prosecution had decided that the case was not in their jurisdiction
    and had sent the file to the Trabzon prosecution, despite the argument
    of the Dink family that the case should be tried as a whole.

    The Trabzon prosecution then decided that there was no clear and
    convincing proof for prosecution. After the objection, the nearest
    heavy penal court in Rize confirmed this decision, saying there was no
    evidence of gross negligence or previous knowledge of the murder plans.

    RSF: Police officers also need to be put on trial Meanwhile,
    the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders (RSF) issued a new press
    release on 6 March, in which it criticised the lack of progress which
    a parliamentary subcommittee for human rights was making in its probe
    into the murder.

    Senior police and gendarmerie officials from Istanbul and the Trabzon
    blamed each other for the failure to take the necessary measures to
    prevent Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink's murder when they were
    questioned at the end of last month by the parliamentary subcommittee.

    "We reiterate our call for all those investigating the role of
    the security forces in connection with the Dink murder to make
    every effort to establish who was responsible for what," Reporters
    Without Borders said. "To this end, we think it is important that
    the police officers implicated should be tried at the same time as
    Dink's alleged murderers."

    Trabzon and Istanbul police accuse each other When the parliamentary
    subcommittee questioned Trabzon intelligence department chief Engin
    Dinc on 28 February, he reportedly identified Erhan Tuncel, who is
    charged with being one of the masterminds of Dink's murder, as a
    police informer. Dinc said he only spoke with Tuncel once to ask
    him to convince Yasin Hayal, another of the Dink trial defendants,
    not to kill Dink.

    Dinc accused Ahmet Ilhan Guler, the head of the Istanbul police
    intelligence department, of failing to react after the Trabzon police
    issued an alert about a murder plot. The accusation had already
    been made to the subcommittee by former Trabzon police chief Ramazan
    Akyurek, now head of police intelligence in Ankara.

    During his appearance before the subcommittee, Akyurek said
    he alerted the police in 81 cities of "possible attacks against
    minorities," adding that "it was not necessary to identify Hrant Dink
    by name." Akyurek directly accused Istanbul police chief Celalettin
    Cerrah of failing to react to his alert.

    According to Agos, the subcommittee has decide to question Cerrah
    again, this time in Ankara.

    The Dink family and its lawyers are calling for all the Trabzon and
    Istanbul police officers involved in the case to be charged and tried
    in Istanbul.

    --Boundary_(ID_USvWSdoEBMi9vHlXb6sWJA)- -
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