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ISTANBUL: Hackers post Dink killer's photo on Agos Web site

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  • ISTANBUL: Hackers post Dink killer's photo on Agos Web site

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 13 2010

    Hackers post Dink killer's photo on Agos Web site


    The Web site of bilingual Armenian weekly Agos, whose former
    editor-in-chief Hrant Dink was shot dead by a teenager in 2007, has
    been hacked by an ultranationalist group that posted Dink's suspected
    hit man's photo on the page.

    Visitors to agos.com.tr yesterday were greeted with a photo of Ogün
    Samast, showing him with a Turkish flag in the background. The photo
    was taken after Samast was caught in Samsun, two days after killing
    Dink on Jan. 19, 2007, and drew the ire of many as it showed members
    of the security forces posing for pictures with Samast.

    The hackers also left a note on the screen threatening the daily with
    more deaths if they do not change their editorial policy to what the
    group wants. `You either love [this country] or leave it or you die as
    [the] traitor Dink did. If you don't correct your discourse and
    articles to the direction we want, new Ogün Samasts and Hrant Dinks
    will appear,' the note read.

    Speaking to the private NTV/MSNBC news station, Sarkis Güreh, an Agos
    reporter, said they would take legal action on the issue. Calling the
    attack upsetting, Güreh said, however, that they are not afraid.

    An investigation of the Dink assassination revealed that a group of
    ultranationalists was behind the murder, and police arrested the
    suspected gunman, Samast, and an associate, Yasin Hayal, a few days
    after Dink's murder. Strong evidence suggested that some members of
    the group had ties with the police department in Trabzon, the hometown
    of the plotters. Some gendarmes later confirmed that they had been
    tipped off about the plot to kill Dink before the murder was
    committed. Dink family lawyers have frequently alleged that the police
    attempted to obscure evidence.

    Lawyers representing the co-plaintiffs in the Dink trial have long
    claimed that the murder was the doing of Ergenekon, a clandestine
    group charged with plotting to overthrow the government. In the latest
    hearing they also petitioned the 14th High Criminal Court to contact
    the prosecutors investigating Ergenekon to request a copy of documents
    that describe the organization's plots against religious minorities in
    Turkey.

    13 February 2010, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN Ä°STANBUL
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