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ANKARA: Secret Witness Reveals Dink's Murder Involved Teamwork

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  • ANKARA: Secret Witness Reveals Dink's Murder Involved Teamwork

    SECRET WITNESS REVEALS DINK'S MURDER INVOLVED TEAMWORK

    Today's Zaman
    May 12 2010
    Turkey

    A group that gathered at the BeÅ~_iktaÅ~_ dock on Monday held a
    protest to demand that the details in Dink's murder emerge. They
    carried banners reading "We know who the murderers are" and "For Hrant,
    for Justice."

    The drilling of a secret witness during the latest hearing on the
    assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was
    fatally shot by an ultranationalist teenager outside the headquarters
    of the Agos weekly in 2007, revealed that Dink's murder was the
    result of a group effort, raising renewed suspicions of a possible
    police cover-up.

    A secret witness identified Osman Hayal, Yasin Hayal and Ogun Samast,
    who claims to be the murderer, as suspects at the 13th hearing of the
    Dink trial, held on Monday. Osman Hayal contested the secret witness'
    statement and added that he and his brother could not be accomplices.

    Police records from the Trabzon Police department show Yasin Hayal
    was in Trabzon at the time of the murder.

    Samast said he committed the murder alone and that Osman and Yasin
    Hayal were nowhere near him.

    "Is the Trabzon Police Department telling the truth?" asked Dink family
    lawyer Arzu Becerik while answering questions from Today's Zaman.

    "There are already leads making us think the police had been tipped
    off about the planned assassination more than once before Dink's
    murder but had failed to prevent it. And now if the testimony of the
    secret witness is correct, we legitimately question the truthfulness
    of the police again," she said.

    The secret witness, whose voice was distorted, said s/he saw the murder
    while walking outside an Akbank branch toward the Agos building. One
    person who approached Dink from the front had a seconds-long talk with
    him. Then two other people approached Dink, one of them tall and thin,
    wearing jeans and a jacket. The witness also said that s/he did not
    notice if the main suspect was wearing a white cap. Regarding the
    other person who approached Dink, the witness said this person was
    wearing a striped sweater and a heavy jacket and that he was plump
    and had curly hair.

    "I saw four or five people related to the incident. They were talking
    to each other. They were standing on the sidewalk where Dink was
    killed. Following the incident, one person escaped from the scene.

    This was the brother of Yasin Hayal," said the witness, who was
    also asked to identify the suspects. The court officials brought the
    defendants to the front and placed them among the other defendants
    in the case.

    The secret witness identified Osman Hayal, Yasin Hayal and Samast
    from among the others when their pictures were projected into the
    room where s/he was located.

    Dink was gunned down on Jan. 19, 2007, in broad daylight in front of
    the headquarters of the bilingual Armenian weekly Agos, where he was
    editor-in-chief. Police arrested Samast and Yasin Hayal a few days
    later. There are 20 suspects in the case. With Monday's release of
    two more suspects, Ahmet Ä°skender and Ersin Yolcu, only Samast, Yasin
    Hayal and Erhan Tuncel, a former police informant who is believed to
    have supplied the hit man with a gun, remain under arrest. The court
    rejected the co-plaintiff lawyers' demand for the arrest of Osman
    Hayal. So far 17 suspects have been released pending trial. The next
    hearing will be on July 12.

    The court also ruled that the Ä°stanbul Gendarmerie Central Command
    should be asked whether or not it made extortion payments to Erhan
    Ozen, currently an inmate at Amasya Prison, who wanted to voluntarily
    testify in the Dink case. Ozen, whose demand to be a secret witness
    was not taken seriously, claimed at Monday's hearing that he worked
    for JÄ°TEM, a secret and illegal military intelligence agency, and
    was paid by the Ä°stanbul Gendarmerie Central Command.

    Ozen said a group of people had a project to take pictures of the
    surroundings of Agos, and he was part of that team. He also said
    Tuncel, Osman Hayal and Yasil Hayal worked for JÄ°TEM.

    "We have many more demands of the court to probe the case deeper,
    but the court failed to do that," Becerik said.

    "Even though there are renewed suspicions about the failures of the
    police in the process, our demands have been rejected by the court,"
    she added.

    Among many others, one issue she was referring to is the fact that
    Akbank's security camera recordings, which were taken by the Ä°stanbul
    Police Department right after the assassination, have been cut. The
    recordings, which were edited by the police before being presented
    in court on grounds that the police had to cut several people from
    the footage for security reasons, do not show Yasin Hayal.

    "Indeed, the recordings show the witnesses but not the suspects,"
    Becerik pointed out, noting that another witness had also indicated
    that Yasin Hayal was at the murder scene. Becerik also said Akbank
    officials say they gave the recordings to the police without editing
    or distorting them.

    On Monday, the Dink family's lawyers requested that the hard disk
    belonging to Akbank be sent to the Scientific and Technological
    Research Council of Turkey (TUBÄ°TAK) in order to determine whether
    or not it was irreversibly distorted. The court accepted the request.

    The trial also revealed that officials from the Trabzon Police
    Department had contacted Ä°stanbul police and informed them that Yasin
    Hayal would come to Ä°stanbul to kill Dink. The Ä°stanbul police,
    however, did nothing, but prepared reports to show that it had.

    The Dink family lawyers have long argued that, in order to solve the
    murder case, there is a need to see the whole picture that led to
    Dink's murder. "We cannot do that with one separate case in Trabzon,
    another in Samsun and yet another in Ä°stanbul. They need to be merged,
    but the court won't do that," Becerik said.

    Another revelation that came at the latest hearing of the trial
    showed that some defendants in the Ergenekon case were in contact
    with defendants in the Dink case.

    A report sent from the Ä°stanbul Police Department to the court
    hearing the Dink case said six defendants in the trial of Ergenekon,
    a terrorist organization whose members stand accused of planning to
    overthrow the government by staging a coup, had telephone conversations
    with defendants in the Dink case prior to Dink's murder.

    According to the report, these Ergenekon suspects include Veli Kucuk,
    Kemal Kerincsiz, Mustafa Levent GöktaÅ~_, Muzaffer Tekin and Erbay
    Colakoglu.

    However, Becerik said this information relates to the preparation
    phase of Dink's murder. She said that prior to his murder, Dink was
    tried on grounds of insulting Turkishness through statements in one of
    his articles and that Kucuk came to the hearings with his supporters
    who were ready to lynch Dink.

    The Dink family's lawyers demanded in February that the court
    investigate whether Dink's killing was part of the Cage plan, an
    alleged military plot to create panic and chaos exposed by the Taraf
    daily late last year. The plan mostly focused on killing non-Muslims
    and bombing mosques to create turmoil that would eventually help
    the plotters take over the government. A prosecutor is examining the
    indictment into the plot to find possible links. The Cage plan calls
    the killings of Dink, Catholic priest Father Andrea Santoro and three
    Christians in Malatya an "operation."

    "Our hope is to reveal the masterminds of the Dink murder and public
    officials who had negligence of duty in preventing the assassination
    and again public officials who played a role in cover-ups after the
    murder," Becerik said.
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