Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Father Of Suspect Casts Doubt On Dink Trial's Fate

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Father Of Suspect Casts Doubt On Dink Trial's Fate

    FATHER OF SUSPECT CASTS DOUBT ON DINK TRIAL'S FATE

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Nov 14 2011
    Turkey

    Bahattin Hayal, the father of a murder suspect in Hrant Dink trial,
    claims that his son was tricked by state officials into the murder
    and he will announce their names

    A group of protesters hold a banner that reads 'For Hrant, for Justice'
    during a demonstration in front of the BeÅ~_iktaÅ~_ courthouse before
    a hearing of Dink murder trial. DAILY NEWS photo, Emrah GUREL

    The father of one of the suspected conspirators in the Hrant Dink
    murder has withdrawn his initial testimony due to fears about his
    personal safety and expressed no confidence that the case will ever
    be resolved in its entirety.

    "I am in full agreement with the Dink family's lawyers. I do not
    believe that the dark side of this case will truly come to light. I
    cannot look at the faces of the Dink family; it gives me pain,"
    Bahattin Hayal, the father of suspect Yasin Hayal, who allegedly
    instigated hitman Ogun Samast to assassinate the Turkish-Armenian
    journalist, told reporters yesterday after a hearing.

    Only minutes before the end of the most recent hearing in Istanbul's
    BeÅ~_iktaÅ~_ courthouse, Bahattin Hayal requested to act as a witness,
    adding that he held important information. His request, however,
    was denied by the court.

    "They warned me that I would find myself in trouble. I told them
    that I had shared the truth with them, but they forced me to change
    my testimony," he said.

    A high-ranking official in the southeastern province of Mardin has
    frequently transmitted messages to him through an intermediary, he
    said, adding that he would share that information with the public in
    short order.

    "Following the murder, many people who got involved in the incident,
    including [suspect] Erhan Tuncel, received bonuses," the suspect's
    father said.

    "Erhan [Tuncel] takes a computer printout of Hrant Dink's picture and
    tells my son that it is the 'Armenians' Ataturk' and thus depicts him
    as a target. How would my son know anything about Hrant Dink or Agos?"

    he said, adding that his son was used by Tuncel.

    "Erhan Tuncel ought to reveal [the identity of] his superiors and
    what their connections are. My son has become a snack in the feast
    of the wolves," he said.

    Meanwhile, just over two months are left until the erasure of phone
    records relevant to the case. The Telecommunications Directorate
    (TÄ°B), which possesses the records, earlier refused two court demands
    to disclose the records; when a higher court also ruled in the same
    vein, the body then issued a series of demands of its own for the
    records to be revealed. Phone records are only kept for five years,
    meaning authorities must convince TÄ°B to release the transcripts by
    Jan. 19, 2012, the fifth anniversary of Dink's murder.

    Dink, a journalist of Armenian origin, was the chief editor for
    weekly Agos, a paper published in both Turkish and Armenian. He was
    shot in front of his office in January 2007; Samast was sentenced to
    22 years in prison on July for the murder.

    GOVERNMENT BLAMED FOR RECORDS

    The Malatya deputy of the main opposition Republican People's Party
    (CHP) has accused the country's Telecommunications Directorate (TÄ°B)
    of attempting to hamper the Dink case and accusing the ruling Justice
    and Development Party (AKP) of standing behind the body's actions.

    "Nearly all state institutions are working to prolong the [trial]
    process and to make [people] forget about the murder, rather than
    trying to shed light on it," CHP deputy Veli Agbaba told members of
    the press in Parliament.

    The TÄ°B's behavior bordered on the negligent and intentional, Agbaba
    said, adding that he TÄ°B's temerity comes from the fact that its
    president is protected by the AKP.

Working...
X