Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: The Hrant Dink Case Should Not End This Way

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

  • ANKARA: The Hrant Dink Case Should Not End This Way

    THE HRANT DINK CASE SHOULD NOT END THIS WAY
    By Joost Lagendijk

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 15 2011

    In July 2007 I attended the first session of the trial of the people
    who were suspected of killing Hrant Dink in January of that year. I
    was there as a friend of Hrant to give moral support to his family
    and as a member of the European Parliament to show that Europe cared
    about this murder that had shocked so many in Turkey and abroad.

    The mood in the packed BeÅ~_iktaÅ~_ courtroom was a mix of sadness and
    determination to uncover the full truth about Hrantâ~@~Ys murder. There
    was even some optimism that this time around the persons responsible
    would not be able to escape justice. Everybody still remembered what
    had happened before in the 1980s and 1990s, when several journalists
    were killed but none of the cases were solved. Many, including myself,
    thought that maybe, hopefully, this trial would be different because
    Turkey had changed and there was a government in place that seemed
    to be willing to confront past and present brutalities. Hundreds of
    thousands of Turkish citizens had shown at Hrantâ~@~Ys funeral that
    they were willing to support these efforts to go the extra mile to
    bring the guilty ones before court.

    Two days ago I was among the few hundred friends of Hrant who gathered
    in front of the same BeÅ~_iktaÅ~_ court to protest against the way the
    case was handled over the last four years. The mood was a mix of gloom,
    anger and outrage about the inability of the judicial authorities
    to do what they were expected to do and the unwillingness of the
    government to intervene and stop the court messing up this trial.

    In the years in between many have tried to convince the prime minister
    and other ruling party leaders to step in and prevent the Dink case
    from ending up in the same pile of unresolved murders for which
    Turkey is so infamous. The Dink family lawyers tabled many requests
    to broaden the scope of the investigations beyond the small circle of
    nationalist youngsters from Trabzon who were on trial because nobody
    believes that they were the ones who masterminded the murder. There
    was ample evidence that Ogün Samast, the young guy who pulled the
    trigger, and his friends were under the control and surveillance of
    Trabzon state officials long before the assassination. Links with the
    local police and gendarmerie have been uncovered but these officials
    were not investigated. Other law enforcement agents knew that Hrant
    was under threat but still did not act. They remained off the hook as
    well. State institutions lost proof and evidence of this involvement
    but nothing happened.

    The latest example of this shameful and criminal negligence is the
    unwillingness of the Telecommunications Directorate (TÄ°B) to come
    up with crucial records that would help to determine the whereabouts
    of several suspects and their accomplices. TÄ°B has been ordered by
    the court to provide this information but has refused, so far, to
    deliver those records. This clear obstruction of justice is done by an
    organization that is under the direct control of the government. Who
    is protecting TÄ°B and why?

    This is only one of many questions about the responsibility of the
    present authorities in Ankara. In a fully functioning democracy where
    the rule of law is undisputed one could argue that there is no role
    to play, for the executive and court cases should be left to the
    judiciary. In Turkey, it is a bad joke to hide behind this legalism.

    The Turkish judiciary is neither impartial nor independent. It never
    was. As previous governments did, the Justice and Development Party
    (AK Party) administration has intervened in the functioning of the
    judiciary when it deemed it necessary to push for reforms or to
    protect vested interests.

    I know it tried in the Dink case to put pressure on certain suspects
    behind the scenes. It is sad and worrying to conclude that these
    interventions were not successful -- either because the government
    did not push hard enough or because it was not courageous enough to
    enter into a hazardous confrontation with still existing deep state
    structures.

    As long as people can get away with murder in Turkey because part of
    the state apparatus helps and protects them, and the government is
    not able or willing to break that ring of impunity, Turkey will be
    unable to convince anybody that it is on the right path to becoming
    a true democracy.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X