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ANKARA: Two Years On: Lawyers Summarise Dink Trial

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  • ANKARA: Two Years On: Lawyers Summarise Dink Trial

    TWO YEARS ON: LAWYERS SUMMARISE DINK TRIAL

    BIA Magazine
    Jan 19 2009
    Turkey

    The trial of the murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink
    started on 2 July 2007 in Istanbul. In the following, lawyers Fethiye
    Cetin and Deniz Tuna summarise events of the trial.

    Two years have passed since Hrant Dink's murder. In a report a year
    ago we evaluated the trial so far thus:

    *The murder of Hrant Dink, preparations for his murder, making him
    a public target, encouraging his murder, the involvement of security
    forces, the preparation of a hitman and the carrying out of the murder
    are all part of the same process. However, although this sequence
    of events needs to be looked at as a whole, it has been separated
    into parts. Thus, the organs investigating the events are blind to
    the whole sequence. If the period before and after the murder is
    not considered together with the murder, then the Hrant Dink murder
    investigation will not reach any conclusions.

    *Security forces and all intelligence units had determined that Hrant
    Dink's life was under serious and imminent threat. Intelligence units
    had even been informed of all the details concerning the murder
    plan. Nevertheless, no precautions were taken. On the contrary,
    some public officers tried to cover up evidence and hid information
    about the gravity of the situation from each other. The gendarmerie,
    the police force and MIT (Turkish secret service) did not share any
    information about Hrant Dink's murder. On the contrary, we have seen
    that they kept information from each other and, after the murder,
    accused each other.

    *During the investigation, those public officers being investigated
    continued on active duty. These were people in leading positions,
    and they were involved in handing in documents for the investigation
    themselves. That is, the investigation was based on the evidence
    handed in by those under investigation. This alone shows that the
    investigation cannot have been independent or reliable.

    *Those public officers being investigated did not only offer documents
    to the administrative investigation, but also to the Istanbul Chief
    Public Prosecutor's Office investigating the murder of Hrant Dink. Some
    of them are even today giving evidence and documents in the court
    case running at the Istanbul 14th Heavy Penal Court. It is clear that
    Hrant Dink's murder will not be solved as long as these officers
    continue on active duty and are allowed to hand over information,
    documents and evidence.

    Unfortunately, two years after the murder, the above statements still
    hold true. There have been no positive developments. [...]

    Main Court Case The main development in this case, where a total
    of 19 suspects were on trial last year (8 of them in detention),
    is that another suspect is on trial. Osman Hayal, the elder brother
    of suspect Yasin Hayal, has been found to have been in Istanbul on
    the day of the murder. Initially a witness in the case, he has now
    been added to the trial as a defendant.

    Case No. 2007/428 of the Istanbul 14th Heavy Penal Court is still
    continuing in the same building because no more suitable building
    has been found. However, the location has been technically equipped
    to record the hearings.

    In June 2008, following the 18th birthday of the man accused of
    carrying out the shooting, the court hearings were opened to the
    public. Since then, the court hearings have been attended by as many
    members of the public and the press as the location permits.

    Demands from our side to combine the separate investigations in
    Istanbul (where the murder took place), Trabzon (where the hitman
    and other accused lived) and Samsun (where the hitman was caught)
    because there have been legal connections and shared activities have
    been rejected continuously. It is noteworthy that the reasons given
    for these rejections have not been satisfactory or legal.

    Many times, joint attorneys have filed complaints against security
    forces at the Trabzon and Istanbul Prosecutor's Offices, the Trabzon
    Criminal Court of Peace as well as the Istanbul 14th Heavy Penal Court
    under Article 83 of the Turkish Criminal Law, arguing that members of
    the security forces knew about plans to kill Hrant Dink, but neither
    prevented the murder nor protected him. However, after each complaint,
    both prosecutors and courts ignored the obligations of the law and
    rejected these complaints with legally unconvincing arguments.

    Istanbul Police Force Following Law 4483, three preliminary
    investigations against Istanbul police officers were initiated
    immediately after the murder. However, the regional administrative
    court put an end to these three investigations with an uncalled for
    and openly illegal decree.

    Investigators commissioned by the Ministry of the Interior sent the
    case file to experts twice. These expert intelligence officers were
    asked to write a report on whether Istanbul police officers acted
    negligently after receiving information sent from Trabzon. Based
    on the expert opinion, the investigators prepared a report in which
    they held the whole Istanbul police force, including chief of police
    Celalettin Cerrah, guilty of negligence.

    Although Istanbul police officers claimed they had acted appropriately
    after the Trabzon police force sent them information on 17 February
    2006 (that is, previous to the murder), the expert report and
    preliminary investigation showed that this was not the case. Measures
    against Yasin and Osman Hayal were only taken after the murder had
    been committed. In addition, the experts and investigators expressed
    their suspicion that fake documents were created to cover up the fact
    that this only happened after the murder.

    Despite these three preliminary investigations and two expert
    reports, as well as permission for investigation given by the
    Istanbul governor's office three times, six police officers, including
    Istanbul head of intelligence Ahmet Ä°lhan Guler, were exempted from
    investigation by the Istanbul Regional Administrative Court. The
    court ignored five folders with thousands of pages of documents, as
    well as the reports. This court decision forced the joint attorneys
    to apply to the European Court of Human Rights, as well as to file
    a complaint against the judges of the administrative court with the
    Council of Judges and Prosecutors.

    Trabzon Police Force While the Istanbul police force is suspected of
    knowing all the details of the planned murder and not doing anything
    to prevent it, and then of obscuring and destroying evidence after
    the murder, members of the Trabzon police force have also escaped
    any attribution of blame in the investigations.

    The preliminary report prepared under Law 4483, as well as a decree by
    the Governor's Province Administrative Council, have found the Trabzon
    police force to be blameless. Permission to investigate any officer
    was not given. The objection of the joint attorneys was rejected
    by the Trabzon Regional Administrative Court in a two-line decree,
    thus leaving no other options in domestic law.

    The Trabzon Chief Prosecutor's Office decided after its
    investigation of the Trabzon police force that there was no need for
    prosecution. When the joint attorneys filed an objection at the Rize
    Heavy Penal Court, it was rejected. Again, there are no other options
    in domestic law for the joint attorneys to explore, so they have taken
    the two cases against the Trabzon police force to the European Court
    of Human Rights.

    Trabzon Gendarmerie Officers Following a preliminary investigation
    of officers at the Trabzon gendamerie, two gendarmerie officers,
    Okan Å~^imÅ~_ek and Veysel Å~^ahin, were taken to the Trabzon
    2nd Criminal Court of Peace, charged with negligence. In their
    statements in court on 20 March 2008, the two officers said that
    they had received intelligence that Yasin Hayal's brother-in-law
    CoÅ~_kun Ä°gci was going to kill Hrant Dink. They said that they
    informed their superiors, but that their commander Ali Oz changed
    the topic, saying, "We will talk about this later"; the topic was
    never discussed again. Following their statement, other gendarmerie
    officers were questioned and supported the statement.

    The Trabzon 2nd Criminal Court of Peace then sent the file to the
    Trabzon Prosecution in order to file a complaint against Trabzon
    Gendarmerie Commander Colonel Ali Oz and other officers. The
    prosecution combined this file with the complaint filed by the joint
    attorneys and applied for a preliminary investigation to the Ministry
    of the Interior. Investigators commissioned by the Ministry decided
    to initiate an investigation against these officers. The Trabzon
    Prosecution then prepared an indictment against Ali Oz, Metin Yıldız,
    Huseyin Yılmaz, H. Omer Unalır, Gazi Gunay, Okan Å~^imÅ~_ek, Veysel
    Å~^ahin and Onder Araz and decided to start a trial.

    Although the trial of Å~^imÅ~_ek and Å~^ahin had raised expectations,
    it looks as if the state will respond in its usual manner. The
    Trabzon 2nd Criminal Court of Peace came to the conclusion that the
    crime could not be considered a simple neglect of duty, and thus sent
    the file to the Heavy Penal Court to open a trial under Article 83
    of Turkish Criminal Law (see above). However, the Criminal Court of
    First Instance charged with decreeing on this change of courts decided,
    without offering satisfactory arguments, that the case should continue
    to be heard at the Criminal Court of Peace.

    Samsun Police and Gendarmerie Officers One development which has shaken
    people's trust in the justice system is the acquittal of Samsun police
    officers. Everyone knows that when Ogun Samast, the man accused of
    shooting Hrant Dink, was caught in Samsun, he was taken to the police
    station. Perhaps because he was under 18 years old, he was not taken
    to the cells, but kept in the tea room. He was with police officers
    and gendarmerie officers. They queued up to have their photos taken
    with Samast, posing with a Turkish flag. Special care was also taken
    to include a calendar with the slogan "The soil of the motherland
    is holy, and it will not be abandoned" in the pictures. Although
    these officers treated a murder suspect not like a suspect but like
    a hero, although they took photos in their official uniforms, and
    although their identities were known, only two officers were taken to
    trial. What were they accused of? Of not preventing the pictures from
    being leaked to the press and of holding the accused in the tea room.

    Apart from these two officers, the Samsun Chief Public Prosecutor's
    Office has decided that there is no reason for prosecution. Joint
    attorneys objected to the CarÅ~_amba Heavy Penal Court. Following a
    rejection of the objection, they were forced to appeal to the European
    Court of Human Rights.

    The two police officers on trial were acquitted by the Samsun 4th
    Criminal Court of First Instance. The joint attorneys have lodged
    an appeal.

    Report of the Parliamentary Human Rights Committee The Parliamentary
    Human Rights Committee has published its report on the Hrant Dink
    murder. On page 183 of the report, the committee comes to the following
    conclusions:

    "Police and gendarmerie officers knew of a threat to Hrant Dink. He
    died because notes on this threat were not researched fully and
    necessary action was not taken. Despite the fact that CoÅ~_kun Ä°gci
    was a registered informant of the Province Gendarmerie Command,
    information and intelligence coming from him was insufficiently
    investigated and evaluated. Despite the fact that the administrative
    units knew about the threat, there was neglect at each stage, and
    nothing done to prevent the murder.

    Article 17 of our constitution and Article 2 of the European Convention
    on Human Rights states that everyone has a right to life. The state
    did not fulfill its duty of protecting this right to life."

    This report thus reiterates what all previous investigations found:
    that all security forces knew about a planned murder of Hrant Dink
    but did nothing to prevent it.

    Prime Ministerial Review Committee On 2 December 2008, the Prime
    Ministerial Review Committee prepared a report confirming the
    findings about the security forces in previous reports. In addition,
    new information was unearthed. While such new information may seem
    like a ray of hope, at the same time this information did not come
    out during the countless previous investigations, and it has not
    reached the courts dealing with the trials.

    In part of the report, it says:

    "The Trabzon Province Police Force received intelligence about a
    planned murder of Hrant Dink around a year before. It did not fulfill
    its duty of investigating the intelligence and planning an operation
    and of informing the Istanbul Police Force and the Intelligence
    Department.

    Similarly, following a letter from the Trabzon Intelligence Unit to the
    Istanbul Intelligence Unit on 17 February 2006, in which it said that
    "work on the person are continuing", as well as a phone conversation
    between officers of the branches talking about this letter, in
    which it was said that Istanbul was to be informed of developments,
    and following a report of 7 April 2006 with additional information,
    the necessary institutions were not informed."

    "...Despite intelligence information frmo Yasin Hayal that there was
    a plan to murder Hrant Dink, a letter from Armenian Patriarch Mesrob
    Mutafyan, death threats made to Hrant Dink, as well as other events
    during the period that Hrant Dink was on trial, the Istanbul Police
    Force did nothing towards protecting Hrant Dink and did not show the
    necessary sensitivity in carrying out its duties."

    Thus, according to the findings of the Review Committee, the Trabzon
    and Istanbul Police failed to do their duty. The committee also found:

    "Despite the fact that, following the letter by the Trabzon
    Intelligence Unit from 17 February 2006, there was enough information
    (particularly after the dismissal of informant Erhan Tuncel) to
    coordinate between the units towards a possible operation, to follow
    events and to take measures to protect Hrant Dink, we have concluded
    that C Branch Chief Ali Fuat Yılmazer, who neglected to carry out the
    necessary evaluations and protective measures outlined in the circular
    concerning the Programme of Targeted Persons, as well as Ramazan
    Akyurek and other officers, who acted negligently, despite acting as
    Central Intelligence Unit deputy chiefs and as Intelligence Unit chief
    (Akyurek), should be investigated in a preliminary investigation of
    the Ministry of the Interior, following Law No. 4483.

    This report is signed by the Prime Minister, and it remains to be
    seen what will happen.

    [...] BBP and Nationalist Organisations Another issue that has to
    be considered is the suspects on trial are either members of the BBP
    (Great Unity Party) and the nationalist Alperen Hearths, or, if they
    are not members, they had a lot of contact with them.

    Since 2002, suspect Yasin Hayal always had relations with the
    Nizam-ı-Alem Hearths, an organisaiton with ideological and political
    connections to the BBP; he attended meetings and worked there as a
    teamaker. When the Nizam-ı-Alem Hearths changed their name to Alperen
    Hearths, this relation continued. When Yasin Hayal beat up the priest
    of the Santa Maria church, faked bomb alarms, bombed McDonald's and
    took part in the planning of Hrant Dink's murder, he was a member of
    the BBP.

    Suspect Erhan Tuncel was in similar intensive contact with the BBP and
    the Alperen Hearths; this is where he met Yasin Hayal. Erhan fought
    for the leadership of the hearth with Mustafa Ozturk. The BBP was
    also important to him. When the chair of the BBP came to Trabzon,
    Erhan Tuncel was one of those accompanying him around the city. He
    was on sufficiently intimate friendly terms with the chair to talk to
    him about Yasin. According to Erhan's statements in court, he still
    has the key to the hearth meeting place.

    Mustafa Ozturk was the leader of the Alperen Hearth when the murder
    was being planned. It is said that the prospective murderers were
    brought to the hearth and introduced to him, and that details of the
    plan were discussed there.

    When YaÅ~_ar Cihan was BBP Trabzon Province party chair, he supported
    Yasin in prison, both materially and morally. Similarly, Halis Egemen,
    then BBP central party officer, supported Yasin Hayal and his family
    after the latter went to prison for bombing McDonald's.

    A recent television programme broadcast on TRT, entitled "The
    Labyrinth of Shahs", shows what Hrant Dink represented to the BBP
    and its supporters. One of the programme advisors appearing on the
    programme as a witness to the MaraÅ~_ massacre (1978, over 100 people
    were killed), OkkeÅ~_ Å~^endiller, is a founder and member of the
    BBP. He made untruthful and criminal statements, insulting Hrant Dink
    and, with the party's racist views, made Armenians a public target
    yet again. The BBP, with its openly racist and xenophobic ideology,
    needs to be watched carefully.

    As long as politics, language and culture are not cleansed of this
    racist hatred and violent discourses, and as long as the propagators of
    such discourses do not face sanctions, there is no guarantee against
    more such murders being carried out.

    Conclusions *The following question still remains unanswered: Why,
    despite the findings of the reports of the Parliamentary Human Rights
    Committee and the Prime Ministerial Review Committee, have those
    security units who neglected to act on the grave and imminent threat
    that Hrant Dink was under and did not provide security not been put
    on trial?

    *At this point it has become clear that MIT (secret service),
    gendarmerie and police did not fulfill their responsibilities,
    did not cooperate and coordinate, kept information and intelligence
    from each other, and started to accuse each other in order to shift
    blame. Although these three organisations are clashing, they are
    surprisingly united on two issues:

    Despite knowing that Hrant Dink would be killed, they were decisive
    not to do anything to protect him.

    They were determined to treat Hrant Dink's murder suspect(s) as heroes.

    *As was pointed out above, investigations carried out in this way
    will not solve the murder. It is clear, once again, that the time
    before and after the murder have to be investigated together, and
    that court cases have to be merged.

    *According to information emerging during the trial, Yasin Hayal
    (involved in planning in the murder), his brother Osman Hayal (who
    is strongly suspected of being at the crime scene during the murder)
    and Hrant Dink were all under police surveillance. Similarly, murdered
    priest Andrea Santoro (killed in Trabzon in 2006) and the three men
    killed in Malatya in 2007 were all under police surveillance at the
    time of their murders. It is highly though provoking that the state is
    able to let people under surveillance be killed, and that the murder
    suspects, also under surveillance, are not pursued.

    *If the state wants to rid itself of responsibility of this murder,
    it must at least prosecute those in its institutions who have found
    to be responsible. The justice system must treat all the court cases
    and investigations as a whole.

    --Boundary_(ID_stDgevNT/pxRnRTuiIICEg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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