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ANKARA: No Advance In Dink Assassination Case Even After Three Years

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  • ANKARA: No Advance In Dink Assassination Case Even After Three Years

    NO ADVANCE IN DINK ASSASSINATION CASE EVEN AFTER THREE YEARS

    Hurriyet
    Jan 18 2010
    Turkey

    The Hrant Dink assassination case has not advanced despite the
    three years since his death. Dink's relatives and friends share the
    pessimism of the family's lawyers about the future of the case. 'The
    Dink murder wouldn't be solved even if the Ergenekon case ends,'
    according to Yalcın Cilingir, a close friend of the late Dink Although
    some hitmen who have assassinated journalists in Turkey during the
    last three decades have been caught, their leaders behind the scenes
    have never been revealed.

    Abdi Ä°pekci, former chief editor for the daily Milliyet was gunned
    down in the Macka neighborhood of Istanbul in 1979. The Ä°pekci
    assassination was a beginning - more followed afterward. Among those
    murdered journalists, the assassinations of Ugur Mumcu and Ahmet
    Taner KıÅ~_lalı in 1993 and 1999 had the most tremendous impact.

    Three years ago, one of the more infamous recent assassinations
    occurred. Hrant Dink, chief editor for the daily Agos, published in
    both Turkish and Armenian, was shot in front of his paper's office
    on Jan. 19, 2007.

    According to the criminal report, Dink lost his life a few seconds
    after the first bullet. The significant detail that separates the
    Dink assassination from the ones of Ä°pekci, Mumcu and KıÅ~_lalı
    is that he was a Turkish citizen of Armenian origin who strived to
    bring the sensitive matters of the Armenian problem to Turkey's agenda.

    The Dink family, along with their lawyers, Fethiye Cetin and Deniz
    Tuna, has reiterated its hopelessness about the progress of the case
    at every opportunity. The sudden illness of Turkish Armenian patriarch
    Mesrop II just weeks after the assassination raised many questions
    that were not answered, even after the official medical diagnosis.

    Isolated by both Turks and Armenians

    The Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review spoke to Yalcın (OÅ~_in)
    Cilingir, a close friend of Dink, and lawyer Luiz Bakar, one of Agos'
    founders and a press spokeswoman for the patriarchy on the third
    anniversary of the assassination.

    Dink was a figure who attempted to tear down the wall between
    the people of Armenia and Turkey after the sad events of 1915. He
    believed the two peoples should build dialogue between themselves
    without interventions from the outside, stating this opinion at every
    opportunity. Dink's stance caused reactions in Armenia and among the
    Armenian diaspora as much as it did in Turkey. Some Armenians even
    claimed Dink was a Turkish agent.

    "Some people are reborn after death," said Cilingir. "Hrant perceived
    both the societies of Armenia and Turkey as psychologically ill
    when it came to the events of 1915; he said both societies needed
    treatment. That was why he was isolated by both Turks and Armenians.

    It was more agonizing that Armenian society left his outstretched
    hand hanging in air."

    Dink in the history pages

    There were times when Cilingir could not control his emotions during
    the interview. "Hrant ended a 100-year loneliness for Istanbul's
    Armenians even though he knew it would cost him his life," he said.

    "He managed to make the two peoples get involved in dialogue. The
    thousands of people who hit the streets after his death are the
    biggest example of that."

    Describing Dink as his brother and as "a brave person who jumped into
    the sea without knowing how to swim," Cilingir said the murdered
    journalist has already attained his rightful place in the pages
    of history.

    Cilingir is like a member of the family who lacks the surname Dink
    only. He said he went through great agony after the assassination. "It
    is not possible for anyone to comprehend the pain his wife Rakel and
    children experience everyday."

    A critical approach to the Dink case

    Cilingir said he is not hopeful about the progress of the Dink case.

    "The Ergenekon case might come to a result but the Dink murder will
    not because the 'don't let this go too much farther' mentality is
    dominant in the Ergenekon case. The hitman will be set free in a few
    years just like it happened with the Ä°pekci case."

    Cilingir said Dink had not mentioned the threats he was receiving to
    either himself or his own brother. "Television shows were making him
    a target. Being put on trial for Article 301 of the Turkish Penal
    Law was the straw that broke the camel's back."

    Mesrop II and Hrant Dink at the crossroads

    Bakar said Hrant became a target because his words were twisted. "This
    was done on purpose. This situation served the purposes of some
    people."

    Bakar published the following comment in Agos: "Agos was our child.

    Before Agos, there were prejudices against the Armenian community in
    the public opinion. We were perceived as unfavorable citizens. We have
    showed that we share the fate of this country thanks to our newspaper."

    Agos' founding figures have split in time. When Mesrop II rose to
    the patriarchy, Dink supported the idea that the community's daily
    affairs be separated from religious ones, a fact that brought the
    two to a crossroads. "Mesrop II and Hrant were strong characters,
    that was why they had a conflict but they always kept their love for
    each other," Bakar said.

    Asked whether he believes there is a connection between Dink's
    assassination and the patriarch's illness, Bakar said: "The doctors
    do not know what triggered Mesrop II's illness. It is impossible for
    me to comment on that."

    Bakar said she is following the Dink case closely with a lawyer's
    perspective. "The case is going nowhere fast."

    The Ergenekon case

    The Ergenekon case started after the discovery of 27 hand grenades in
    June 2007 in a shanty house belonging to a retired non-commissioned
    officer in Istanbul 's Umraniye district. The grenades were found to
    be the same ones used in attacks on the daily Cumhuriyet's Istanbul
    offices in 2006.

    The finding led to scores of arrests, putting more than 100
    journalists, writers, gang leaders, scholars, businessmen and
    politicians into detention in what became a terror investigation
    to stop the alleged ultranationalist, shadowy gang referred to as
    Ergenekon. In the later stages of the investigation, those under
    custody were accused of planning to topple the government by staging
    a coup in 2009 by initially spreading chaos and mayhem.

    The earlier bombings of Cumhuriyet, Dink's assissination, the
    murder of the Council of State's top judge and alleged plans for
    the assassination of high-profile figures in Turkish politics are
    occasionally associated with the case.
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