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ANKARA: Tens Of Thousands March In Protest Of Hrant Dink Verdict

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  • ANKARA: Tens Of Thousands March In Protest Of Hrant Dink Verdict

    TENS OF THOUSANDS MARCH IN PROTEST OF HRANT DINK VERDICT

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 19 2012
    Turkey

    Some 40,000 people were out on the streets on Thursday in various
    provinces across Turkey to commemorate Armenian-Turkish journalist
    Hrant Dink, who was shot dead outside his newspaper's office in
    癬^i癬_li on Jan. 19, 2007, two days after a court verdict that
    established that there was no "criminal organization" link in the
    assassination, although plenty of evidence suggests otherwise.

    A large crowd gathered in Taksim at 1 p.m., but there were other events
    in the same area in the evening as well. Other cities that saw large
    crowds gathering both to commemorate Dink and to protest the court
    verdict, which they say didn't find or punish the real perpetrators
    who organized the murder, included Ankara, 襤zmir and Adana.

    Dink's family and friends and human rights organizations placed
    red carnations on the spot where Dink was shot dead in 襤stanbul
    outside the office of Agos, the Armenian newspaper where he was
    editor-in-chief.

    Some 10,000 people began marching towards Agos' office in Halaskargazi
    Street "for justice," a call shared by Turkish leaders and leading
    businessmen who expressed unease with this week's sentencing of one
    man to life in prison for masterminding the killing, while another
    18 were acquitted of charges of acting on a terrorist organization's
    orders. The group is set to make a statement to the press in front
    of Agos.

    Journalist and writer Karin Karaka癬_l覺, who is from Turkey's Armenian
    community, read a press statement -- on behalf of the group from the
    window of Agos -- that slammed Tuesday's ruling. "We want an end to
    this shame," she said, referring to the five-year-long trial that has
    failed to shed light on the masterminds behind the murder. "They are
    telling us that the [case] file has been closed. The Dink case is not
    a file that can be closed. The Dink case is a wound," she continued.

    The hashtag #kardesimhrant (mybrother Hrant) was the top trending topic
    for Turkey on Twitter, while the words Taksim -- where the protesters
    met in 襤stanbul -- and Agos remained in the top 10 throughout much
    of the day. Thousands of micro bloggers reported every second of the
    event in a fast-moving stream of tweets.

    At the night club Ghetto, a commemoration concert for Dink was held.

    The bands and artists who performed were Aylin Asl覺m, Cafe Aman
    襤stanbul, Gripin, Jehan Barbur, Karde癬_ Turkuler, Mogollar, Mor ve
    Otesi, Redd, Rojin and 癬^evval Sam.

    What really happened?

    Dink was shot dead by an ultra-nationalist teenager in broad daylight
    five years ago. The hit-man, Ogun Samast, and eighteen others were
    brought to trial. During the process, the lawyers for the Dink family
    and the co-plaintiffs in the case presented evidence indicating
    that Samast was not acting alone. 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 not found guilty of the murder. The prosecution
    believes the killers are affiliated with the Ergenekon network, whose
    suspected members currently stand trial on charges of plotting to
    overthrow the government. The lawyers have documented that the police
    force in Trabzon, where most of the suspects are from and where the
    assassination plot was hatched, and the 襤stanbul Police Department
    knew about the murder. In a separate trial, two gendarmerie officers
    were convicted on charges of "dereliction of duty" in the run-up to
    the Dink murder. There have also been other instances hinting at a
    cover-up and even protection of the suspects, but the court decided
    that a group of teenagers plotted to kill the journalist because he
    was an Armenian. The verdict was met with outrage by civil society
    gruops, politicians and others.

    One photograph, released to the media shortly after the murder
    for example, showed Samast -- the shooter -- standing next to two
    proud-looking police officers with a Turkish flag in the background,
    allegedly taken at the Samsun Police Department where he was captured
    before he was brought to 襤stanbul.

    The court's verdict, which found that the teenagers acted on their
    own, came on Tuesday, two days before the fifth anniversary of the
    Dink murder. The protests reflected a combined sense of mourning,
    grief and anger.

    The possible Ergenekon connection On Friday, Erdal Dogan, a former
    lawyer for Hrant Dink, said there were many links that were covered
    up during the investigation. He said that Zekeriya Oz, the former
    prosecutor conducting the investigation into Ergenekon -- the
    clandestine network of coup plotters -- was removed from office last
    year just when he was about to investigate further into the heart of
    the group that was really behind the murder.

    "When you look at the big picture, you see the structure [behind
    the murder], the organization. We see the traces of this in the
    Sledgehammer coup plot of 2003," he said, referring to a subplot
    allegedly devised by a coup-planning group inside the military that
    had non-Muslims at its target. "Even the names of the people who
    would kill Dink were written out at the time."

    Dogan was quoted by the Dink agency as saying that he had been
    following the main Dink murder trial -- and the related trials -- since
    2005. He said he gave up his role as a plaintiff lawyer shortly after
    it occurred to him that nothing would come out of the court process. He
    told the Cihan news agency: "The prosecutor did not conduct a thorough
    investigation. I had earlier said that nothing would come out of that
    trial. There were criminal complaints filed against people -- some of
    whom are now jailed in the Ergenekon trial -- who attacked the lawyers
    and the Dink family during the trial," referring to Kemal Kerincsiz,
    an ultra-nationalist lawyer, who, along with like-minded individuals,
    went to the first few hearings in the Dink trial and verbally harassed
    and physically assaulted Dink's friends.

    Dogan also said the "structure" that killed Dink still has the power
    to commit many other atrocities. He noted that the Cage action plan
    -- another coup document that is currently under investigation --
    includes a proposal to assassinate important public figures from
    non-Muslim communities and that the planned murders were referred to as
    "operations." Dogan said it was also out in the open that a group of
    officers in the Trabzon police collaborated with those carrying out
    the Cage plan. "There are serious incidents of negligence. If those
    could have been prevented, Dink would still be alive."

    President Abdullah Gul on Thursday in his second statement on the
    verdict said concluding the trial fairly and transparently is a major
    test for Turkey.

    "The Hrant Dink trial is an important trial. It has special sensitivity
    since it concerns one of our non-Muslim citizens. It is a major test
    for us to conclude the trial process so far and from now on in a
    fair and transparent way," he said on Thursday as he responded to
    questions from reporters in Aksaray.

    Gul recalled that the lawyers and the prosecutors involved in the case
    have appealed the decision and that the final verdict would be given
    by the Supreme Court of Appeals. "I hope the final verdict comes soon,"
    he added.

    Main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) leader Kemal
    K覺l覺cdaroglu also made a statement, leveling criticism at the ruling
    Justice and Development Party (AK Party) for the controversial verdict.

    K覺l覺cdaroglu said in his Twitter feed on Wednesday that there are
    those who define students demanding free education as members of
    a criminal organization, but don't consider Dink's murder the work
    of an organized criminal effort. "This is the AK Party's justice,"
    K覺l覺cdaroglu added in a veiled statement meant to suggest the
    government played a role in the court's decision.

    Other reactions Metin Ozyurt, head of the Law Center, a civil
    society group promoting legal democratic rights, offered a related
    view, saying, "It is a major contradiction that the same people who
    are conducting campaigns for the release of Ergenekon suspects are
    questioning organizational links in the Dink murder." Ozyurt said Dink
    was killed to serve the ends of the Cage Plan plotters. He criticized
    the critics of the Ergenekon trial, who claim that the trial has become
    an instrument for the government to crack down on its opponents. Ozyurt
    said the assassination of Dink, the 2006 killing of an Italian priest
    in Trabzon and the brutal murders of three Christians in Malatya in
    2007 were connected and were part of the Cage plan.

    The Turkish Industrialists and Businessmen's Association (TUS襤AD)
    issued its first formal statement on the verdict on Thursday. At
    the 42th General Assembly meeting of her organization, TUS襤AD
    President Umit Boyner said the verdict in the murder trial of Dink,
    "a patriot who loved this land and its people," hurt the public
    conscience. She said the verdict had shocked the public, but she
    also criticized the arrest of journalist Nedim 癬^ener as part of the
    Ergenekon investigation. "In the run-up to this verdict, a journalist
    who exposed the role of illegal structures [inside the state] and
    the role of some state officials in the murder, or the failure to
    prevent it, was arrested on charges of being a part of the illegal
    organization that he thought he had exposed."

    She said the verdict greatly shattered public confidence in the
    judiciary and judicial mechanisms.

    Parliamentary Constitutional Commission head Burhan Kuzu also made a
    statement on the verdict, saying: "We will wait for the appeals process
    to be completed. It is not right to bring this to the forefront before
    the judicial process is completely over."




    From: A. Papazian
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