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Top Turkey Court Rules Journalist Murder Probe Was Flawed

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  • Top Turkey Court Rules Journalist Murder Probe Was Flawed

    TOP TURKEY COURT RULES JOURNALIST MURDER PROBE WAS FLAWED

    Agence France Presse
    July 17, 2014 Thursday 4:46 PM GMT

    ANKARA, July 17 2014

    Turkey's top court on Thursday ruled that the investigation into the
    killing of an ethnic Armenian journalist had been flawed, paving the
    way for potential further trials against new suspects.

    The constitutional court unanimously decided that the authorities had
    failed to carry out an effective investigation into the 2007 killing
    of journalist Hrant Dink.

    Dink was shot dead in broad daylight by a teenage ultranationalist
    outside the offices of his bilingual Agos newspaper.

    Ogun Samast, a 17-year-old jobless high-school dropout at the time,
    confessed to the murder and was sentenced to almost 23 years in jail
    in 2011.

    However supporters of Dink's family believe that those behind the
    murder were protected by the state and have asked for a deeper
    investigation to uncover officials who were allegedly involved.

    In 2012, an Istanbul court sentenced Yasin Hayal to life in prison
    for planning the killing but the family is concerned that those who
    ordered the killing have never been brought to justice.

    It was Dink's family who made the formal complaint that prompted the
    ruling by the constitutional court.

    Bahri Belen, lawyer for the Dink family, said that the decision was in
    line with a previous verdict issued by the Strasbourg-based European
    Court of Human Rights which found Turkey guilty of failure to prevent
    the journalist's murder and carry out an effective probe.

    Belen said the latest verdict paved the way for the trial of state
    officials who could be implicated in the murder and had so far been
    protected by a cover-up.

    "I hope there will be positive developments and the court decision
    will be implemented," he told NTV private television.

    Dink, 52, had campaigned for reconciliation between Turks and
    Armenians, but incurred the wrath of Turkish nationalists for calling
    the mass killings of Armenians during World War I a genocide.

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