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Istanbul: Court's Reasoned Opinion On Dink Verdict Unsatisfactory, L

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  • Istanbul: Court's Reasoned Opinion On Dink Verdict Unsatisfactory, L

    COURT'S REASONED OPINION ON DINK VERDICT UNSATISFACTORY, LAWYER SAYS

    Today's Zaman
    Feb 23 2012
    Turkey

    An İstanbul high criminal court on Thursday announced its reasoned
    decision concerning an earlier ruling that there was no involvement of
    an organized criminal network in the 2007 killing of Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink, citing insufficient evidence to prove wider
    involvement in the murder, which a lawyer for the Dink family says
    is hardly convincing.

    The İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court said in its 216-page-long
    reasoned decision, distributed to lawyers involved in the case on
    Thursday, that the court could not establish the journalist was killed
    by an organized criminal network. In what many said was a shocking
    and frustrating ruling in the five-year-long trial of the Dink case,
    the İstanbul court last month cleared all suspects of charges of
    membership in a criminal organization, angering lawyers and many
    others who say the trial failed to shed light on alleged connections
    between the suspects and state officials.

    Cem Halavurt, a lawyer for Hrant Dink, told Today's Zaman that the
    court's 210-page reasoned opinion was a confirmation of its verdict
    listing all the evidence the court has for not establishing that
    there is involvement of an organized crime network. "So the court is
    listing all the evidence and we are listing all the evidence here,
    and we see the clear involvement of a criminal network. The court
    talks at length on why it failed to see evidence for suspecting an
    organized network, but there is clear evidence indicating an organized
    crime link, given what we know about the suspects. So this is about
    interpretation or misinterpretation"

    The court convicted Yasin Hayal, a major suspect in the killing of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink, of instigating a murder and sentenced
    him to life in prison. Another suspected instigator, Erhan Tuncel,
    was acquitted by the court.

    "We have on our hands a situation in which it is unnatural for the
    suspects to decide on and commit a murder on their own that would
    bring about so many political consequences. This situation also
    raises suspicion [of the involvement of a criminal organization
    in the murder]. Suspicion is a rule of criminal law that should be
    interpreted in favor of the suspect. Because of all these reasons,
    it was necessary to acquit the suspects [of membership in a terrorist
    organization] since the crimes of establishing, being a member of and
    aiding a terrorist organization attributed to the suspects could not
    be definitely proven with concrete evidence," the court said.

    The court added that the evidence on hand failed to establish when
    and with what motive a criminal organization would have had a hand
    in the murder.

    Dink was shot dead on Jan. 19, 2007 by ultranationalist Ogun Samast
    outside the offices of his newspaper in İstanbul in broad daylight.

    Even though five years have passed since his assassination, Dink family
    lawyers and civil society organizations have long remained concerned
    that evidence relating to the real perpetrators of the crime is still
    being covered up and that even if the court's ruling punishes the
    hitmen, the public's sense of justice will not be satisfied. The
    assassination is suspected of being the work of Ergenekon, a
    clandestine network whose suspected members -- including generals,
    military officers and many civilians -- are currently in jail for
    plotting a military takeover.

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