Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ISTANBUL: State Watchdog: Flaws In Investigating Officials' Negligen

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

  • ISTANBUL: State Watchdog: Flaws In Investigating Officials' Negligen

    STATE WATCHDOG: FLAWS IN INVESTIGATING OFFICIALS' NEGLIGENCE IN DINK MURDER CASE

    Today's Zaman
    Feb 20 2012
    Turkey

    The summary of a report prepared by the State Audit Institution
    (DDK) regarding the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
    has revealed that mistakes were made in the investigation of public
    officials who were suspected to have acted negligently in preventing
    the murder. The summary of the DDK report was posted on the website
    of the presidential office on Monday.

    Dink, the late editor-in-chief of Agos, was shot dead by an
    ultranationalist teenager outside the offices of his newspaper in
    broad daylight in İstanbul on Jan. 19, 2007. The investigation into
    his murder stalled when the suspected perpetrator and his accomplices
    were put on trial as those who masterminded the plot to kill him have
    yet to be exposed and punished. In the face of growing calls from the
    public and a European Court of Human Rights ruling that found Turkey
    guilty of failing to protect Dink's right to life and of carrying
    out a thorough investigation into the officers who failed to take
    the necessary measures in light of early warnings and tips about the
    plot to kill Dink, Gul ordered the DDK to investigate the Dink murder
    last year.

    The investigation that followed Dink's death revealed that the police
    had been tipped off to the plans for the murder of the journalist;
    however, the police failed to intervene. The summary of the DDK
    report said the sequence of negligent acts by public officials was
    not examined as a whole and no investigation was launched separately
    into different state institutions.

    It said the method adopted during the investigation of public officials
    led to the failure of not investigating all allegations about public
    officials as a whole.

    The report noted that as a result of this failure, the seriousness of
    the actions of public officials in the run up to the murder has not
    been understood and the link between their actions and the murder
    could not be established, leading to the failure of all of the
    investigations into public officials. Speaking to the station NTV,
    Justice and Development Party (AK Party) Deputy Chairman Huseyin Celik
    agreed that mistakes had been made throughout the investigation of
    the Dink murder.

    "We know that many mistakes were made since the beginning in the run
    up to murder, which began in Trabzon. The detection of these mistakes
    by the DDK is a significant step to see the functioning of the law.

    The final ruling in the Dink case will be appealed. When the DDK
    findings are conveyed to the relevant authorities, there will be
    investigations again," he said.

    A majority of the suspects, including the hitman, are from Trabzon,
    where police say they had informed the İstanbul police about the
    plot to kill Dink on more than one occasion.

    The İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court issued its final ruling in the
    Dink trial last month, which failed to please those expecting justice
    to be served. During the process, lawyers for the Dink family and the
    co-plaintiffs in the case presented evidence indicating that hitman
    Ogun Samast did not act alone. Samast stood trial in a juvenile
    court because he was a minor at the time of the murder. He was
    recently sentenced to 22 years, 10 months in prison by the court. In
    a separate trial, two gendarmerie officers were convicted on charges
    of dereliction of duty in the run-up to the Dink murder.

    Another suspect, Yasin Hayal, was given life in prison for inciting
    Samast to murder. However, Erhan Tuncel, who worked as an informant for
    the Trabzon Police Department, was found not guilty of masterminding
    the murder. The prosecution believes the killers are affiliated with
    the Ergenekon network, a shadowy criminal network that has alleged
    links within the state and whose suspected members are currently
    standing trial on charges of plotting to overthrow the government.




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X