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Turkey: Mysterious Clerical "Error" Delays Murder Trial

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  • Turkey: Mysterious Clerical "Error" Delays Murder Trial

    TURKEY: MYSTERIOUS CLERICAL 'ERROR' DELAYS MURDER TRIAL

    Compass Direct News
    March 18 2008
    CA

    Court clerks fail to forward lawyers' request to replace 'biased'
    judges.

    ISTANBUL, March 18 (Compass Direct News) - The fourth trial hearing
    yesterday against the murderers of three Christians in southeast
    Turkey was postponed for another month after court clerks failed to
    file a request to replace judges accused of bias.

    Plaintiff lawyers' official demand to replace the presiding bench of
    judges had been filed on March 1, but when the Malatya Third Criminal
    Court convened yesterday it was confirmed that the request still
    had not been forwarded to the higher court in Diyarbakir, which was
    designated to rule on it.

    Plaintiff lawyers had demanded a new set of judges at the previous
    hearing on February 25, listing repeated instances of bias and
    partiality that they declared were "obstructing justice" in the
    high-profile murder case.

    As required by Turkish court procedures, the plaintiffs then filed
    their written complaint within the legal deadline of seven days, to
    be sent from the state prosecutor's office of Izmir's 10th Criminal
    Court to Diyarbakir's Criminal Court for official review. But the
    Diyarbakir court has yet to receive the complaint.

    According to a report published yesterday in Malatya Haber newspaper,
    the lawyers' written complaint was faxed from Izmir on March 3 to the
    Malatya criminal court, rather than to the Diyarbakir court designated
    to review it. Even then, only the first page of the complaint was
    faxed, not the complete document.

    Dubbed "the missing fax comedy" by today's Sabah newspaper, the
    failure of the Izmir court staff to forward the complaint to the
    higher court in Diyarbakir forced the Malatya tribunal to postpone
    the hearing for another month, until April 14.

    In doing so, the presiding judges in Malatya issued an accusation of
    "criminal offense" against court clerks of the state prosecutor's
    office in Izmir, declaring that their ineptitude in processing the
    legal complaint "within a reasonable time" had brought a "negative
    effect" on the case.

    Since the trial opened last November, only one of the five murder
    suspects and two accused "accomplices" have testified in court.

    Gun Charge Dropped

    In another twist in the case, last week Malatya's Second Criminal
    Court acquitted prime murder suspect Emre Gunaydin on charges of
    carrying and shooting a pistol fitted with blanks in an inhabited
    location in Malatya on April 17, the day before he and four other
    suspects attacked Zirve Publishing Co. offices.

    Gunaydin, who is accused of being the ringleader of the five suspects
    in the Malatya massacre, had purchased the Smith & Wesson gun on
    April 16. He was detained the following day, April 17, for shooting
    off the pistol in Malatya's Pinarbasi district.

    Police records indicate that Gunaydin was interrogated and released,
    with the pistol confiscated by the police. But on April 18, this
    same gun was found at the scene of the crime, allegedly brought there
    by Gunaydin.

    "The question as to how Gunaydin got this gun [back] remains
    unanswered," NTV reported on its Internet website on March 13.

    Gunaydin and his four cohorts, all under the age of 21, attacked the
    Zirve office on April 18, 2007. After tying up and torturing Turkish
    Christians Necati Aydin and Ugur Yuksel and German Christian Tilmann
    Geske with knives, they slit all their throats.

    In identical notes found in their pockets, the killers declared their
    motives were to protect their country and their religion, Islam,
    from Christian missionaries.

    A new draft report last week from the European Parliament's rapporteur
    on Turkey specifically called on Turkish authorities to carry out "a
    full investigation" into the Malatya murders and the assassination
    of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, as well as all other cases of
    "politically or religiously motivated violence."

    "Prime Minister Erdogan and his government made the commitment
    that 2008 is going to be the year of reforms," Dutch rapporteur Ria
    Oomen-Ruijten commented when releasing the report on March 13. "The
    time has now come to make use of its strong parliamentary majority
    to fulfill this commitment and accelerate the reform process."

    END

    *** Photos of Necati Aydin, Ugur Yuksel and Tilmann Geske are
    available electronically. Contact Compass Direct News for pricing
    and transmittal.
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