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Justice Not Served In Hrant Dink's Case

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  • Justice Not Served In Hrant Dink's Case

    JUSTICE NOT SERVED IN HRANT DINK'S CASE

    IFEX
    http://www.ifex.org/turkey/2012/01/19/dink_trial/
    International Freedom of Expression Exchange: The global network for
    free expression
    Jan 19 2012

    A Turkish court this week sentenced a man to life in prison for
    inciting the murder of prominent ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink five years ago, but cleared all 19 suspects of belonging to
    a terrorist organisation, reports IFEX member in Turkey the IPS
    Communication Foundation (BIANET), along with other IFEX members.

    Dink, founder and editor-in-chief of the bilingual Armenian-Turkish
    newspaper "Agos", was shot in front of his office in Istanbul on 19
    January 2007, in a case that highlighted the threat faced by Armenians
    in Turkey.

    On 17 January, the court found Yasin Hayal, 31, guilty of incitement
    to kill Dink in 2007 but acquitted 19 other suspects of the charge
    of acting as members of an illegal armed organisation, says BIANET.

    The ruling was denounced by Dink's lawyers and supporters who say the
    journalist was targeted for being Armenian and for campaigning for
    reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey over their violent history.

    "Today's verdict - two days before the fifth anniversary of the
    journalist's assassination - resulted in the convictions of only
    secondary accomplices and failed to address the pivotal question of
    who masterminded the crime," said the Committee to Protect Journalists
    (CPJ).

    Another prime suspect, Erhan Tuncel, a police informer, was sentenced
    to 10 and a half years in jail, but for a separate crime.

    The self-confessed murderer, 17-year-old high-school dropout Ogun
    Samast, was sentenced to nearly 23 years in prison last July.

    Dink's assassination sent shockwaves through Turkey and grew into a
    wider scandal after reports that the security forces had known of a
    plot to kill him but failed to act.

    His conviction for insulting Turkishness just months before his death
    branded him a traitor and made him a target for hardline nationalists.
    He had called the massacres of Armenians under Ottoman rule a genocide.

    IFEX members were shocked by the court's decision to exclude all
    possibility of the involvement of organised crime. "By portraying
    this murder as the work of a small group of fanatics, the judicial
    authorities have reflexively protected the state, whose role in
    this murder has nonetheless been demonstrated by all the independent
    investigations," said RSF.

    "The judges are mistaken if they think they can thereby defuse the
    political time bomb within this case and spare members of the state
    apparatus from ever being charged. The shockwave that Dink's murder
    caused within Turkish society will continue to pursue them until they
    finally agree to do their duty," RSF added.

    IFEX members have pointed out numerous irregularities in the Dink
    murder investigation since the trial began in July 2007, including
    deleted evidence and misinformation presented to the court by security
    and police officials.

    "This trial is not yet over," said Fethiye Cetin, one the Dink family's
    lawyers. "What just ended was a farce. For Hrant's friends, the trial
    has just begun."

    RSF joins Dink's friends in calling for a demonstration in Istanbul's
    Taksim Square on 19 January, the fifth anniversary of his murder,
    to demand the end of impunity.

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