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ISTANBUL: Officer Promoted Despite Claims In Dink Murder

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  • ISTANBUL: Officer Promoted Despite Claims In Dink Murder

    OFFICER PROMOTED DESPITE CLAIMS IN DINK MURDER

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Feb 3 2012
    Turkey

    A top officer accused of alleged negligence in the murder of
    journalist Hrant Dink, Ramazan Akyurek, receives a promotion and
    appointed as the head of the Inspection Board in the Police Department

    Interior Minister Ä°dris Naim Å~^ahin has made a number of appointments
    in the Police Department whereby Ramazan Akyurek, a top officer
    accused of alleged negligence in the murders of both Hrant Dink and
    Friar Santoro, received a promotion.

    "Ramazan Akyurek, who served in the highest rank in terms of [access
    to] intelligence during both murders, has not been discharged from
    his post by the government, but rather taken under its protection,
    despite his liability in the first degree," deputy Atilla Kart of
    the main opposition People's Republican Party (CHP) said in a written
    statement yesterday.

    Officer Akyurek was promoted from the head of the Department of
    Strategy Development to the head of the Inspection Board in the Police
    Department Headquarters in Ankara.

    "Ramazan Akyurek was ostensibly removed from his post in response to
    public pressure and outcry two years and nine months after Hrant Dink's
    murder. When he filed a lawsuit at the Ankara 14th Administrative Court
    to be reinstated back to his post, the Interior Ministry paved the
    way for Akyurek to win the case by concealing the truth and issuing
    a formal plea," CHP deputy Kart said.

    Ramazan Akyurek served as the head of the police in the Black Sea
    province of Trabzon between Dec. 2003 and May 2006, whereas Friar
    Santoro was murdered on Feb. 2006, Kart said. Officer Akyurek then
    served as the head of Police Intelligence between May 2006 and Oct.

    2009, during which time Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was
    also murdered in Jan. 2007, Kart added.

    "And thus, all the obstacles that lie before the likes of Ramazan
    Akyurek have been jointly cleared up," he said.

    Erhan Tuncel, a former police informant in Trabzon, said he had warned
    the local police about Dink's murder in 2007. It subsequently came
    to light, however, that Ramazan Akyurek, the chief of the Trabzon
    police at the time, had conveyed only one out of 11 notices to the
    Istanbul Police Department.

    The Interior Ministry discharged Akyurek from his post in relation
    to those accusations in October and appointed him as an expert to the
    Department of Strategy Development. Hrant Dink, the former chief editor
    of the weekly Agos, a paper published in both Armenian and Turkish,
    was shot to death in front of his office on Jan. 19, 2007.

    Hitman Ogun Samast was later sentenced to more than 20 years in
    prison, while instigator Yasin Hayal received an aggravated life
    imprisonment sentence.

    The court released Erhan Tuncel, however, although the chief justice
    and the prosecutor as well as leading government figures have expressed
    reservations about that controversial verdict.

    Friar Andrea Santoro of the Catholic Church of Santa Maria in
    Trabzon was also shot to death by a teenager who was sentenced to
    life imprisonment, although his sentence was later commuted to 20
    years in prison in view of the fact that he was a minor.

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