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WSJ: Court Faults Turkey Over Editor's Murder

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  • WSJ: Court Faults Turkey Over Editor's Murder

    COURT FAULTS TURKEY OVER EDITOR'S MURDER
    By MARC CHAMPION

    Wall Street Journal
    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703376504575491540644727632.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
    Sept 14 2010
    ISTANBUL

    The European Court of Human Rights on Tuesday ruled that Turkey was
    guilty of failing to protect ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
    when authorities knew his assassination was imminent, and of then
    failing to adequately investigate his murder.

    Mr. Dink, the editor of the small, Istanbul-based Armenian-language
    daily Agos, was killed with three shots to the back of the head as
    he returned to the newspaper's offices in January 2007. His murder
    became a cause celèbre in Turkey, and a symbol of the state's alleged
    protection or even encouragement of nationalist extremists.

    "None of the three authorities informed of the planned assassination
    and its imminent realization had taken action to prevent it," the
    court found, while "no effective investigation had been carried out"
    into those failures.

    The decision is an embarrassment for the government of Turkey's
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, which has pledged to improve the
    rights and treatment of the country's ethnic minorities. The government
    recently sought to settle with the family, after withdrawing a defense
    of the state's actions that relied on a precedent that appeared to
    compare Mr. Dink's comments aimed at reconciling Turkish and Armenian
    views on the 1915 slaughter of ethnic Armenians with hate speech by
    a neo-Nazi.

    A spokesman for the ministry of justice didn't return calls requesting
    comment on the ruling. Turkey's foreign ministry issued a statement
    saying the government didn't intend to appeal the court ruling,
    and that "studies for implementation of Dink verdict rulings will
    be done and every possible measure for preventing repeat of similar
    violations will be taken."

    Mr. Dink's family brought the case against the Turkish state at the
    European court in Strasbourg. Tuesday's ruling found for the family
    on all counts, according to their lawyer Arzu Becerik, awarding Mr.

    Dink's widow ~@100,000 ($128,760) in damages.

    Police launched an investigation into the young Turkish
    ultranationalist who allegedly carried out the murder. They
    investigated 17 others, though not the police chiefs and regional
    governors the family believe were complicit in obstructing prosecution
    of those responsible, Ms. Becerik said in an interview. A video taken
    immediately after the assassination appeared to show police smiling
    and posing with the alleged killer, Ogun Samast, a high-school dropout
    then 17 years old.

    The government is pursuing an alleged "deep state" organization in
    a series of massive court cases. It has said it is trying to clean
    up state institutions and bring them under full government control,
    where for decades they had acted as a law unto themselves, on occasion
    toppling elected governments. Ms. Becerik, however, said the government
    needed to do more in the case of Mr. Dink.

    "We will take this decision as a basis to renew our criminal complaints
    [in Turkey] and take those responsible to court," as well as demand
    the current investigation be widened, said Ms. Becerik.

    "These people cannot be taken to court because the regional governors
    did not give permission. The governors are civil servants and they
    answer to the government, which can take them to court."

    Ms. Becerik said the family hadn't accepted the government's offer
    of an amicable settlement, partly because it came too late, but also
    because a negotiation would follow in which the family would be asked
    to compromise on their efforts to secure justice.




    From: A. Papazian
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