LIFE TERMS SOUGHT IN JOURNALIST KILLING
Associated Press
09.19.11, 10:47 AM EDT
ANKARA, Turkey -- Turkey's state-run news agency says a prosecutor
is demanding life imprisonment for seven men accused of involvement
in the killing of an ethnic Armenian journalist.
Hrant Dink was shot outside his office in 2007, a killing allegedly
motivated by ethnic tensions.
In July, a juvenile court sentenced a now 21-year-old Turkish
nationalist hardliner to nearly 23 years in prison for killing Dink.
Nineteen other people are on trial separately, accused of instigating
the killing.
The Anatolia agency says the prosecutor on Monday recommended seven
suspects serve a life term, arguing the murder was based on "ideology"
and amounted to an act against "the Turkish state and its order."
He said five suspects should serve three years in prison, while seven
others should be acquitted.
Associated Press
09.19.11, 10:47 AM EDT
ANKARA, Turkey -- Turkey's state-run news agency says a prosecutor
is demanding life imprisonment for seven men accused of involvement
in the killing of an ethnic Armenian journalist.
Hrant Dink was shot outside his office in 2007, a killing allegedly
motivated by ethnic tensions.
In July, a juvenile court sentenced a now 21-year-old Turkish
nationalist hardliner to nearly 23 years in prison for killing Dink.
Nineteen other people are on trial separately, accused of instigating
the killing.
The Anatolia agency says the prosecutor on Monday recommended seven
suspects serve a life term, arguing the murder was based on "ideology"
and amounted to an act against "the Turkish state and its order."
He said five suspects should serve three years in prison, while seven
others should be acquitted.