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ANKARA: Investigators Face Probe For Dink Case Cover-Up

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  • ANKARA: Investigators Face Probe For Dink Case Cover-Up

    INVESTIGATORS FACE PROBE FOR DINK CASE COVER-UP

    Daily Sabah, Turkey
    March 2 2015

    DAILY SABAH
    ISTANBUL

    Two Interior Ministry investigators face criminal probe for ignoring
    serious charges made against Gulenist police officers concerning the
    murder of journalist Hrant Dink

    Two Interior Ministry investigators face a criminal probe and dismissal
    for covering up the complicity of police officers in the Jan. 19,
    2007 murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink.

    According to a Yeni Þafak report, the Prime Ministry Inspection Council
    published a report, signed by then Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan,
    on Oct. 10, 2008, accusing former Police Department Intelligence
    Chief Ramazan Akyurek and Istanbul Police Department Intelligence
    Chief Ali Fuat Yýlmazer of negligence in the investigation into the
    murder of Dink.

    The Interior Ministry assigned two investigators, Mustafa Uckuyu and
    Mehmet Canoðlu, to assess the case against the two senior officers. In
    their report published on Nov. 9, 2009, the investigators dismissed
    the claims made in the report based on testimonies of other police
    officers, later proved to be involved in the cover up. The report
    absolved Yýlmazer and Akyurek of any culpability and dismissed claims
    that Yasin Hayal, the teenager who pulled the trigger, was part of
    a terrorist group.

    The report created uproar at the Prime Ministry Inspection Council,
    which filed criminal complaints against intelligence officers
    including Akyurek and Yýlmazer, who are accused of having close
    links with the controversial Gulen Movement. The complaints could
    be processed only after Gulen operatives within the police and the
    judiciary were removed. Akyurek and Yýlmazer are now under arrest as
    part of the wiretapping investigation and the Dink investigation. The
    two Interior Ministry investigators who were part of the cover up
    now face a criminal probe that may result in their dismissal.

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