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ISTANBUL: Investigations in Dink case settled out of court

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  • ISTANBUL: Investigations in Dink case settled out of court

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    Aug 22 2012


    Investigations in Dink case settled out of court

    ISTANBUL - Hürriyet Daily News
    by Erdem GüneÅ?

    A recent response from Interior Minister to a question raised in the
    Parliament reveals that 41 investigations against police officers
    named in the case of assassinated journalist Hrant Dink were settled
    out of court

    The Dink family lawyers say they will take the case to the ECHR after
    exhausting all domestic legal avenues one more time, while Dink's
    brother Orhan Dink says `this was the scenario's last scene.'

    The Interior Ministry has revealed that the police officers
    investigated within the case of Hrant Dink's assassination did not
    receive any judicial punishment apart from the forfeiture of pay and a
    reprimand.

    Cem Halavut, one of the intervening lawyers of the case said
    administrative punishments like forfeiture of pay and condemning an
    officer were not what they demanded as they had asked for the officers
    to be taken to court and tried.

    `Prosecutors say they could not reach the evidences, administrations
    of institutions say they did their share and that the ball is in the
    prosecutors' court. This shows that they pass the ball around well,'
    Halavut told the Hürriyet Daily News yesterday in a phone interview.

    Any new investigation kicked off at this point will find it nearly
    impossible to reach the evidence as six years have passed since the
    murder, Halavut said.

    He also said there were numerous documents and evidences revealing the
    responsibility of public personnel in the murder.

    The Interior Ministry announced the judicial and administrative
    proceedings for the law enforcement officers who were found
    responsible in the assassination of Armenian journalist Dink.
    According to the announcement, no judicial investigation authority was
    given to eight police officers, `no need for an additional
    prosecution' was decided for 31 officers, and two officers were
    acquitted.

    Orhan Dink, the brother of Hrant Dink, said his family was despairing
    of justice.

    `There is nothing to be surprised about this. We had demanded an
    effective official investigation but it failed. The large part of the
    State Supervisory Council's (DDK) murder report argued that the
    judicial process was problematic and that police officers were not
    investigated since their chiefs' permission was not taken,' he told
    the Daily News.

    Dink said the authorities do not want to extend the case over a long
    period of time to ensure the public forgets what happened.

    Halavut also said they have been waiting for the Supreme Court of
    Appeals' verdict which will be the end of the domestic judicial
    process. If necessary they will take the case to the European Court of
    Human Rights (ECHR).

    After Hrant Dink, the chief editor of weekly Agos, was assassinated in
    Istanbul on Jan. 19, 2007, judicial and administrative investigations
    were launched against public personnel, including police and
    gendarmerie, whose negligence was detected to be effective in the
    murder. The results of the investigations were brought to the Turkish
    Parliament's agenda with the written parliamentary question issued by
    the Republican People's Party (CHP) Deputy Chair Sezgin Tanrıkulu. The
    Interior Minister Ä°dris Naim Å?ahin's response to the question reached
    the Parliament Speaker's Office.

    `Within the preliminary investigation about Hrant Dink's murder, all
    the necessary works were conducted in accordance with the orders of
    Istanbul Chief Prosecutor's Office, and all the information obtained
    for the identification of offenders was sent to the chief prosecutor's
    office and added to the investigation file at the earliest possible
    opportunity,' Å?ahin said in a written response to the parliamentary
    question.

    Å?ahin also announced the results of the judicial and administrative
    procedures launched for police and gendarme officers detected in
    Trabzon and Istanbul. Å?ahin made 41 decisions about the officers and
    each of them included impunity. `The authorized court decided to give
    no judicial investigation authority to eight police officers, and
    decided that there was no need for an additional prosecution for 31
    officers. Two officers were acquitted and the prosecutor's
    investigation about one officer is still ongoing,' Å?ahin said.

    `Four gendarme officers were charged with four-month prison sentences,
    one was charged with a six-month prison sentence and two officers were
    acquitted,' Å?ahin said about the gendarme officers.

    `One officer got long-term suspension, five received forfeitures of
    pay, three received reprimand and one received warning on the grounds
    that their negligence affected the incident,' Å?ahin said about the
    administrative punishments given to the officers.
    August/22/2012

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