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ANKARA: RSF Questions Relations Between Ergenekon And Hrant Dink Mur

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  • ANKARA: RSF Questions Relations Between Ergenekon And Hrant Dink Mur

    RSF QUESTIONS RELATIONS BETWEEN ERGENEKON AND HRANT DINK MURDER

    BIA Magazine
    June 3 2009
    Turkey

    Reporters without Borders is supporting the call of Hrant Dink's
    family and lawyers for a serious investigation into relations between
    the murder of the journalist and the ultranationalist Ergenekon
    organisation.

    Paris - Rsf03 Nisan 2009, Cuma Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
    supports a request which the family and lawyers of slain Turkish-
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink have addressed to an Istanbul court
    asking it to seriously consider the possibility that the clandestine
    ultranationalist group Ergenekon was involved in Dink's January 2007
    murder. The court is trying a group of men accused of the murder and
    is due to hold its next hearing on 20 April.

    "The court must examine the links that may have existed between
    certain Ergenekon members and Dink's murderers," Reporters Without
    Borders said. "If the court takes account of this evidence, the trial
    could enter a new phase that could lead to an impartial verdict in
    the weeks ahead."

    Connections between murder suspects and nationalists

    The Dink family was told about the possible links by a friend of
    Dink's, Ali Bayramoglu, a reporter with Yeni Safak, a daily newspaper
    that supports Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's Justice and
    Development Party (AKP). Bayramoglu first began suspecting Ergenekon's
    involvement a few days after Dink's murder.

    Ogun Samast, the youth who allegedly fired the shots that killed Dink,
    Yasin Hayal, the accused mastermind, and Erbil Susaman, another of
    the defendants, were all allegedly in physical and telephone contract
    with the Ergenekon network. They are believed to have been in contact
    with Mustafa Ozturk, who at the time was the head of the far-right
    group the Alperen Hearths, and with Veli Kucuk, one of those who have
    been charged and detained for alleged participation in the Ergenekon
    conspiracy.

    The Dink family's lawyers have given this information to the Istanbul
    court handling the Dink murder trial and to the Istanbul court handling
    the Ergenekon case.

    The editor of the newspaper Agos, Dink was gunned down outside the
    newspaper's headquarters in Istanbul on 19 January 2007. The trial
    of his alleged killers began in July 2007.

    An alleged clandestine network with links to the military and
    security forces and inspired by the secular convictions of the
    Turkish republic's founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, Ergenekon is
    accused of plotting against the AKP government. The trial of 86
    alleged participants - 41 of whom are being held in Silivri prison,
    west of Istanbul - began last October.

    Turkey was ranked 103rd out of 173 countries in the latest Reporters
    Without Borders press freedom index. (RSF/AG)

    *This article was taken from www.rsf.org. Subheadings were added.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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