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Hrant Dink: Thousands March In Istanbul After Controversial Verdict

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  • Hrant Dink: Thousands March In Istanbul After Controversial Verdict

    HRANT DINK: THOUSANDS MARCH IN ISTANBUL AFTER CONTROVERSIAL VERDICT

    International Business Times
    http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/284621/20120119/hrant-dink-thousands-march-istanbul-controversial-verdict.htm
    Jan 19 2012

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    Fifty thousand people marched in Istanbul on Thursday in commemoration
    of Hrant Dink, the Armenian journalist who was assassinated exactly
    five years earlier. Holding up photos of Dink and signs reading "We
    are all Hrant, we are all Armenian," they walked to the location in
    the Turkish city where the reporter was killed in 2007.

    Dink was shot dead outside his office at the Turkish-Armenian newspaper
    Agos by a right-wing nationalist named Ogun Samast. The journalist
    was a vocal advocate for Armenian rights and minority groups, and
    published reports on the Armenian Genocide, a tragedy long denied by
    the Turkish government.

    Some of the protests marched to express their outrage over the most
    recent verdicts in the murder trial. Earlier this week, Yasin Hayal
    was sentenced to life in prison in connection to Dink's murder,
    while suspect Erhan Tuncel was acquitted of murder charges. Hayal
    was found guilty of plotting the assassination and giving Samast the
    murder weapon.

    A judge also acquitted 19 suspects on charges that they belonged to
    a terrorist organization called Ergenekon which apparently seeks to
    overthrow the government.

    "First of all this verdict disturbed everyone. It has been so long.

    Even if it's overturned on appeal I don't know how it can satisfy
    people after all this time. But anyway it should be rejected,"
    journalist and protestor Engin Bas told Euronews.

    Turkish politicians have repeatedly vowed to get to the bottom
    of Dink's assassination, but many of his supporters still feel
    unsatisfied.

    "They made fun of us throughout the five-year trial process. We did
    not know they saved the biggest joke to the very end," Dink family's
    lawyer, Fethiye Cetin, told reporters.

    "This ruling means a tradition was left untouched. The state tradition
    of political murders. The tradition of state discriminating against
    some of its citizens and turning them into enemies."

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