AI EXPERT: DINK WAS MURDERED FOR PEACEFULLY EXPRESSING HIS OPINIONS
PanARMENIAN.Net
January 17, 2012 - 14:21 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - The Turkish authorities have failed to address state
officials' alleged involvement in the killing of journalist and human
rights activist Hrant Dink, Amnesty International said Monday, Jan 16,
as the trial of 18 people accused of his murder drew to a close.
Hrant Dink, a Turkish citizen of Armenian descent, was killed on 19
January 2007 outside the offices of the Agos newspaper where he was
the editor.
When the trial ends on Tuesday, almost five years to the day after the
death of Hrant Dink, the authorities will still not have investigated
the full circumstances behind his murder, AI notes.
"Hrant Dink was murdered for peacefully expressing his opinions," said
Andrew Gardner Amnesty International's expert on Turkey. "The security
services knew of the murder plot and were in communication with those
accused of the murder yet nothing was done to stop it taking place.
Nothing short of a full investigation into the actions of all the
state institutions and officials implicated in the murder will
represent justice."
Calls by the Dink family to investigate the collusion and negligence
of state officials in the murder, backed by a European Court of Human
Rights judgment in 2010, have not been heeded.
In July 2011 Ogun Samast, 17 years old at the time of the murder,
was found guilty of shooting Hrant Dink and was sentenced to nearly
23 years in prison by a Children's Court. He was initially given a
life sentence but the term was commuted because he was a minor at
the time of the murder.
In June, Colonel Ali Oz and six other Trabzon Gendarmerie officials
were convicted of negligence for their failure to relay information
of the plot that could have prevented the murder.
"The actions of the Trabzon Security Directorate, Istanbul Governor's
office and the Istanbul Security Directorate have not been effectively
investigated," said Andrew Gardner. "The authorities must address
this immediately and ensure that Hrant Dink and his family receive
the justice they deserve."
Hrant Dink was best known for being critical of the Turkish government
over issues of Armenian identity and over official versions of history
in Turkey relating to the massacres of Armenians in 1915. He was
repeatedly targeted for expressing his opinions. In 2005, he was given
a six-month suspended prison sentence for "denigrating Turkishness"
in writings about the identity of Turkish citizens of Armenian origin,
AI reminds.
The court is expected to issue a ruling on Dink case today, Jan 17.
PanARMENIAN.Net
January 17, 2012 - 14:21 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - The Turkish authorities have failed to address state
officials' alleged involvement in the killing of journalist and human
rights activist Hrant Dink, Amnesty International said Monday, Jan 16,
as the trial of 18 people accused of his murder drew to a close.
Hrant Dink, a Turkish citizen of Armenian descent, was killed on 19
January 2007 outside the offices of the Agos newspaper where he was
the editor.
When the trial ends on Tuesday, almost five years to the day after the
death of Hrant Dink, the authorities will still not have investigated
the full circumstances behind his murder, AI notes.
"Hrant Dink was murdered for peacefully expressing his opinions," said
Andrew Gardner Amnesty International's expert on Turkey. "The security
services knew of the murder plot and were in communication with those
accused of the murder yet nothing was done to stop it taking place.
Nothing short of a full investigation into the actions of all the
state institutions and officials implicated in the murder will
represent justice."
Calls by the Dink family to investigate the collusion and negligence
of state officials in the murder, backed by a European Court of Human
Rights judgment in 2010, have not been heeded.
In July 2011 Ogun Samast, 17 years old at the time of the murder,
was found guilty of shooting Hrant Dink and was sentenced to nearly
23 years in prison by a Children's Court. He was initially given a
life sentence but the term was commuted because he was a minor at
the time of the murder.
In June, Colonel Ali Oz and six other Trabzon Gendarmerie officials
were convicted of negligence for their failure to relay information
of the plot that could have prevented the murder.
"The actions of the Trabzon Security Directorate, Istanbul Governor's
office and the Istanbul Security Directorate have not been effectively
investigated," said Andrew Gardner. "The authorities must address
this immediately and ensure that Hrant Dink and his family receive
the justice they deserve."
Hrant Dink was best known for being critical of the Turkish government
over issues of Armenian identity and over official versions of history
in Turkey relating to the massacres of Armenians in 1915. He was
repeatedly targeted for expressing his opinions. In 2005, he was given
a six-month suspended prison sentence for "denigrating Turkishness"
in writings about the identity of Turkish citizens of Armenian origin,
AI reminds.
The court is expected to issue a ruling on Dink case today, Jan 17.