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Ankara: Suspects In Dink Death Acknowledge Murder Weapon

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  • Ankara: Suspects In Dink Death Acknowledge Murder Weapon

    SUSPECTS IN DINK DEATH ACKNOWLEDGE MURDER WEAPON

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Monday, October 12, 2009

    Two suspects accused of conspiring to murder Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink acknowledged that the gun presented before them
    during the 11th trial of the case on Monday was the weapon used in
    the murder, news agencies reported.

    The gun used to kill Dink was brought to the courtroom while the
    culprits were removed from the courtroom one by one so that they
    could be shown the gun.

    "I was going to kill a man. I was not going to a wedding ceremony,"
    said Ogun Samast, the confessed murderer of Dink, when he saw the
    gun. Later he took the gun and looked at it. Samast said the gun
    he used in the murder had had a problem in its safety lock and that
    the gun he was holding in the courthouse had a similar problem. "It
    was this gun," he said, according to the Anatolia news agency. Yasin
    Hayal, who is a suspected co-conspirator, also said, "I acknowledge
    100 percent that this is the gun."

    Meanwhile, the attorneys for Dink's family demanded the court bring the
    files of two other important ongoing cases they alleged to be connected
    to the Dink case. The first file is for the Ergenekon gang, a group
    currently on trial for allegedly plotting to topple the government by
    creating turmoil in society. The second file, meanwhile, concerns the
    Zirve publishing house case, in which three missionaries were killed
    in the southeastern city of Malatya.

    Fethiye Cetin, the attorney for the Dink family, said that in a report
    commissioned by Parliament's human rights body about the murder,
    Ramazan Akyurek, the intelligence chief of the Black Sea province of
    Trabzon at the time of the murder, had said that he left Trabzon on
    May 8, 2006, and began work in Ankara on May 9, 2006. According to
    him, Dink was murdered because of national sensitivities; he said he
    already had the intelligence about the murder from intelligence units.

    Cetin alleged that public authoriti nk's murder at every stage. Cetin
    also said it is evident that missionaries, Christians, Jews, Kurds
    and Alevis were targeted, according to the briefings Ergenekon case
    suspect Sevgi Erenerol gave to the General Staff in 2006.
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