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ANKARA: Dink Murder Can't Be Treated Like Regular Crime, Politicians

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  • ANKARA: Dink Murder Can't Be Treated Like Regular Crime, Politicians

    DINK MURDER CAN'T BE TREATED LIKE REGULAR CRIME, POLITICIANS SAY

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 20 2012
    Turkey

    The final verdict in the five-year-long Hrant Dink murder trial, which
    established that the suspects had no ties to a larger crime network
    but acted alone, cannot be true, more politicians and commentators
    continued to assert on Friday.

    In a related note, the prosecutor in the court case concerning the
    2007 killing of prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink slammed the
    judge hearing the trial for failing to deliver a fair decision amid
    growing outrage over a trial many feel has failed to shed light on
    alleged official negligence or even collusion. The judge presiding
    over the 14th Ä°stanbul High Criminal Court sentenced Yasin Hayal
    to life imprisonment and acquitted 19 defendants charged with being
    part of a terrorist group. A juvenile court sentenced Dink's assassin,
    Ogun Samast, to 22 years, 10 months in jail last July. He was 17 when
    he committed the murder.

    Prosecutor Hikmet Usta said in a two-page long petition as part
    of his appeal of the verdict, which was delivered on Tuesday, that
    there was sufficient evidence to establish the murder was the result
    of efforts by an organized criminal group. The prosecutor's comments
    came in response to presiding judge Rustem Eryılmaz's earlier remarks
    published in Vatan daily Thursday.

    The judge had commented that while he personally cannot deny the murder
    was the work of an organized network, the evidence submitted to the
    court was not sufficient to issue such a ruling. In his petition,
    Usta acknowledged that judges are independent in delivering decisions.

    However, he dismissed Eryılmaz's argument that there was not enough
    evidence to establish the involvement of an organized criminal network.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also commented on the case on
    Friday, expressing his hope that the Supreme Court of Appeals "will
    clear up any doubts" with regards to the Dink murder trial.

    "The [trial] process has not been completed yet; it is in the appeals
    phase. I hope the judiciary will clear up doubts during the appeals
    process and take steps that will ease the public's conscience,"
    Erdogan said in Ankara during the launch of an urban transformation
    project on Friday. "No plot or provocation will remain secret. No
    murder will remain unsolved," the prime minister added.

    Also on Friday, Justice Minister Sadullah Ergin joined the debate
    saying the prosecutor has now petitioned for an appeal, and he called
    on all sides to continue monitoring the process with calm. "Judges and
    prosecutors speak through their written resolutions or legal queries.

    I think what most of the press reported as the 'prosecutor's response'
    to the judge were actually statements from his petition. Any other
    evaluation or comment would simply hurt the process. The bullets that
    were shot at Dink were [also] shot at Turkey's solidarity, peace and
    brotherhood," he stated.

    He added that the government was disturbed by the truth about shady
    crimes not being brought to light, but noted that they have taken
    significant steps in this direction. However, he noted that the
    government was working hard to make sure that the invisible faces
    behind the Dink murder and other shady incidents -- such as the
    massacres of Alevis in MaraÅ~_, Corum and Sivas or the Council of
    State shooting in 2006 -- are revealed. "This is the first time this
    country is investigating past unsolved murders," he said.

    Republican People's Party (CHP) leader Kemal Kılıcdaroglu also
    commented on the verdict on Friday. "The verdict, which found no
    organized criminal connection to the Dink murder, is obviously not
    the right decision," he said. "There have been hundreds of articles
    and books published about this. The existence of an organized network
    has been well documented."

    "And now the judge and the prosecutor are clashing horns over that
    verdict. This further shows that it was wrong. Since then there have
    been many protests against the verdict, and it has also not been a
    verdict that was accepted as just by the public," he added. The CHP
    leader blamed the government's intervention for the ruling.

    Another person who publicly criticized the ruling was Ä°stanbul
    Deputy Prosecutor Fikret Secen, who has conducted investigations
    into activities associated with organized crime. He told journalist
    Taha Akyol that he believed the Dink killing was the work of an
    organized criminal gang. He also said he was going to petition the
    Supreme Court of Appeals and challenge the ruling. "It might or
    might not be connected, on the basis of the legal evidence we have,
    to Ergenekon [a clandestine network charged with plotting to overthrow
    the government]," he suggested.

    Secen added that the Ä°stanbul prosecutor's office was currently
    conducting an investigation into the alleged negligence of a number
    of police department and gendarmerie intelligence officers who,
    Dink family lawyers say, acted either in collusion with the killers
    or didn't do anything to prevent the assassination despite having
    knowledge of plans to kill Dink. In other words, the Dink murder
    investigation is still under way apart from the process that was
    launched at the Supreme Court of Appeals with the prosecutor's petition
    of the final verdict.

    Secen also said his office was examining the records of cell phone
    numbers found by the Telecommunications Administration (TÄ°B) that were
    active in the vicinity of the crime scene at the time of the murder.

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