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Turkish Officials Could Face Investigation Over Hrant Dink Murder

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  • Turkish Officials Could Face Investigation Over Hrant Dink Murder

    TURKISH OFFICIALS COULD FACE INVESTIGATION OVER HRANT DINK MURDER

    http://asbarez.com/123847/turkish-officials-could-face-investigation-over-hrant-dink-murder/
    Friday, June 6th, 2014

    A poster bearing a picture of Hrant Dink is pictured in front of an
    Istanbul counrthouse. (Photo: AFP)

    ISTANBUL (Hurriyet Daily)--Key officials in Turkey could face a probe
    regarding the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink on
    charges of intent or negligence after an Istanbul court overturned
    a previous ruling.

    An Istanbul court has lifted a previous decision, which has ruled that
    there was no need for sanctions against the former deputy governor
    of Istanbul, Ergun Gungör, Istanbul Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah,
    former Istanbul Police Department Intelligence Head Ahmet İlhan Guler,
    and six police officers regarding the 2007 assassination.

    The court recommended an investigation into nine officials following a
    European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) decision. A lawyer for the Dink
    family, Hasan Bakırcıoglu, confirmed that it is now legally possible
    for a probe against Gungör, Cerrah, Guler, and six police officers.

    Dink, the highly esteemed former editor-in-chief of weekly Agos, was
    murdered in broad daylight in front of his newspaper's building on
    Jan. 19, 2007, by a 17-year-old Turkish nationalist. The triggerman,
    Ogun Samast, was convicted of premeditated murder and sentenced to
    22 years and 10 months of prison after a two year-trial, but lawyers
    representing the Dink family have repeatedly expressed their dismay
    over the way the investigations and the trial were conducted.

    His assassination sent shockwaves through Turkey and grew into a
    wider scandal after it emerged that the security forces knew of a
    plot to kill Dink, but failed to act.

    Backing up widespread accusations of a state conspiracy, another key
    figure in the trial, Erhan Tuncel, claimed in December 2013 that he had
    informed the police of the plan, but that his warnings went unheeded.

    There have been suggestions that the killing was a result of "deep
    state" work, but the court said there was no organization behind the
    murder. According to reports, Dink was called to a police department
    and "warned" about the plot against him, fueling belief that the
    murder was known by some institutions within the state beforehand




    From: A. Papazian
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