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Hrant Dink's Hit Man Was Not Samast, New Witnesses Claim

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  • Hrant Dink's Hit Man Was Not Samast, New Witnesses Claim

    HRANT DINK'S HIT MAN WAS NOT SAMAST, NEW WITNESSES CLAIM

    armradio.am
    21.04.2009 15:39

    Five individuals convicted of unrelated crimes testified as witnesses
    yesterday in the murder trial of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink, who was shot dead in broad daylight by an ultra-nationalist
    teenager outside the office of his newspaper, Agos, in Istanbul on
    Jan. 19, 2007.

    Witness Volkan Eryol, who testified in the Istanbul 14th High Criminal
    Court yesterday, said he had heard a cellmate named Ertugrul Balci
    state that it was not Ogun Samast, the teenager who is currently
    standing trial as the suspected hit man, but another person who shot
    Dink on that day, Today's Zaman reported.

    Another witness, Å~^inasi Å~^enturk, said he had heard details
    from Balci.

    The two witnesses said they had petitioned the court to testify when
    they heard the information Balci gave them in prison. In his testimony,
    Å~^enturk said: "Balci told us that the individuals that are currently
    suspects in the Dink incident actually did not have anything to do
    with the murder. Normally, we wouldn't have paid attention, but Balci
    corresponded with important people. He also said he knew who the real
    murderer was."

    The Dink family lawyers had previously stated their suspicions that
    a second person accompanied Samast on the day of the murder. Veli
    Halis Celik, another inmate at the Silivri Prison Complex where the
    other witnesses are also serving jail time for unrelated crimes,
    gave the same testimony.

    A group of people identifying themselves as "Friends of Hrant" held
    a demonstration yesterday on Barbaros Boulevard in BeÅ~_iktaÅ~_. The
    group complained that authorities were unable to uncover who had issued
    the order to kill Dink although more than two years have passed since
    the murder. The group later sang songs in memory of Dink and dispersed
    without major incident.

    Celik said Balci, who gave the information to the witnesses, was the
    son of Å~^ukru Balci, a former police chief at the Istanbul Police
    Department.

    Samast, the prime suspect in the Dink murder trial, was questioned by
    the Dink family lawyers yesterday. Samast refused to respond to the
    lawyers' question on whether he had testified at the Prime Ministry
    Inspection Board.

    In response to a question on how he was able to find the location
    of the Agos daily in Istanbul, he said he had asked around. Samast
    appeared reluctant to reply to the lawyers' questions in court
    yesterday.

    A delegation of five lawyers from France also followed yesterday's
    trial.

    The French lawyers said they came to show solidarity with the Dink
    family.

    The Istanbul Bar Association released a press statement on the
    delegation's visit, saying the Paris Bar Association had requested
    to join the trial as observers; a req uest which was denied by the
    Istanbul Bar Association on the grounds that if delegation was granted
    observant status, it could harm the independence of the judiciary. The
    Istanbul Bar Association said they had invited the delegation from
    Paris to monitor the trial not as an institution, but as individuals.
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