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ISTANBUL: DDK Report's Censored Pages Call For Probe Of State Offici

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  • ISTANBUL: DDK Report's Censored Pages Call For Probe Of State Offici

    DDK REPORT'S CENSORED PAGES CALL FOR PROBE OF STATE OFFICIALS IN DINK CASE

    Sunday's Zaman
    http://www.sundayszaman.com/sunday/newsDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=272359
    Feb 24 2012
    Turkey

    The undisclosed sections of a report prepared by the State Audit
    Institution (DDK) regarding the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink openly accuse police and intelligence officials of
    negligence in the murder and call for the investigation of certain
    individuals, the Haberturk daily reported on Friday.

    The presidential watchdog announced its report earlier this week on
    the Office of the President's website. The report said mistakes were
    made in the investigation of public officials who were suspected
    of having acted negligently in preventing the murder, adding that
    a sequence of negligent acts by public officials was not examined
    as a whole and that no investigation was launched separately into
    different state institutions.

    However, six pages of the long-expected report were censored,
    reportedly due to state secrecy concerns, arousing curiosity among
    the public over what information they contained. Haberturk, claiming
    to have obtained the full report, said on Friday that the censored
    sections level serious and explicit accusations against police and
    gendarmerie officers and the İstanbul Governor's Office.

    The six pages also reportedly say there is sufficient evidence to file
    charges of negligence against certain officials in the İstanbul and
    Trabzon police departments. The report adds that prosecutors failed to
    file charges against members of the National Intelligence Organization
    (MİT) who reportedly "warned" Dink to be careful when writing his
    articles prior to his assassination in 2007.

    According to Dink's own account published in Agos, of which he
    was editor-in-chief, on Jan. 12, 2007, MİT Marmara Regional Deputy
    Director Ozel Yılmaz and another agent summoned Dink to the İstanbul
    Governor's Office and warned him, telling him to "be careful" about
    what he wrote. The meeting took place on Feb. 4, 2004, shortly after
    Dink wrote an article asserting that Mustafa Kemal Ataturk's daughter,
    Sabiha Gökcen, was of Armenian descent.

    After Dink's assassination, one of the MİT agents who had spoken with
    him at the governor's office that day was revealed to be Yılmaz,
    who is currently a suspect in the investigation into Ergenekon -- a
    clandestine gang charged with plotting to overthrow the government --
    which prosecutors say might also be responsible for Dink's murder.

    Furthermore, in response to a query about the meeting from the
    İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court, MİT said the organization was
    aware of the "meeting" with Dink and its agents at the time.

    Haberturk also reported that the full DDK report underlines that
    the Trabzon Police Department sent a notice to the İstanbul Police
    Department on Feb. 17, 2006, warning them about an assassination plot
    against Dink based on intelligence received from Erhan Tuncel -- a
    police informant in Trabzon. The report also said this information
    was not shared with the Trabzon Gendarmerie Command, although the
    plot concerned individuals in the town of Pelitli, which fell under
    the gendarmerie command's jurisdiction. Despite this information no
    action was taken to prevent the murder, and a fake report was prepared
    following Dink's assassination, the report said.

    The DDK also reportedly discovered that information about a possible
    assassination plot against Dink was received by the Trabzon Gendarmerie
    Command from other sources. Although there was clear intelligence that
    those plotting to kill Dink were obtaining arms, the gendarmerie did
    not give any importance to this information and did not share it with
    any judicial body, the report puts forth.

    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.

    Gul ordered the DDK to investigate the Dink murder last year, following
    growing calls from the public and a European Court of Human Rights
    (ECtHR) 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. The investigation that
    followed Dink's death revealed that police had been tipped off about
    plans to murder the journalist; however, police failed to intervene.

    Deputy PM: Court's reasoned decision adds to 'darkness' surrounding
    Dink case In a related development, Deputy Prime Minister Bekir Bozdag
    commented on the reasoned decision announced by an İstanbul court on
    Thursday on the killing of Dink. 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
    that the journalist was killed by an organized criminal network.

    Bozdag said by acknowledging that there is wider involvement in the
    murder but failing to prove it, the court added more to the "darkness"
    of the case. "I am not sure whether it is logical for the court to
    accept the involvement of an organization in the murder but to say
    that it cannot see it. The reasoned decision has been yet another dark
    curtain. ... The decision failed to light a candle to shed light in
    this darkness," he said.

    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 clarify alleged connections between the suspects and state
    officials. 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,
    Tuncel, was acquitted by the court.

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