By Hurriyet | Tuesday, 18 January 2011
ISTANBUL (Hurriyet Daily News)–Four years after the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink outside his Istanbul office, justice has not been served and has indeed been obstructed, according to a report prepared by lawyers in the murder case.
In their fourth annual report on developments in the case, lawyers for the Dink family have accused the state of protecting suspected civil servants, repeatedly denying reasonable requests and ignoring valid evidence related to the 2007 murder, the anniversary of which is to be commemorated on Wednesday.
“It has appeared as the most significant and systematic fact of this phase [of the trial] that security and intelligence units hid, changed [and] destroyed information and documents that would reveal the material fact; tried to mislead the investigation authorities by offering false testimony; [and] manipulated evidence,” the report read.
On Monday, the Dink family applied to the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office seeking the enforcement of a decision last year by the European Court of Human Rights, which ruled that Turkey had not protected Dink, had not run a proper investigation into the security forces failing to do their jobs, and had ignored the journalist’s freedom of speech.
Hrant Dink Murder Case TimelineJan. 19, 2007 – Hrant Dink murdered in Istanbul Jan. 20, 2007 – Ogün Samast apprehended Jan. 21, 2007 – Then-Istanbul Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah claims there is no larger organization behind Samast Feb. 6, 2007 – Former police informant Erhan Tuncel says he had informed police about the murder 11 months earlier July 2, 2007 – First hearing of the murder case held with 18 suspects April 2, 2008 – Soldiers are asked to testify at Parliament to a commission related to the case but do not show up. A colonel and a captain visit the commission May 2 but do not testify. July 6, 2009 – Samast threatens Dink family members in the courtroom May 10, 2010 – Two more suspects acquitted, leaving only Samast, Tuncel and Yasin Hayal as suspects Sept. 14, 2010 – European Court of Human Rights rules Turkey had not protected Dink Oct. 25, 2010 – Samast’s trial is transferred to a juvenile court |
The family demanded investigations of the police and gendarmerie officials allegedly responsible for the murder, either directly or by neglecting their duties. In their application, they argued that the European court’s decision canceled the authority of certain domestic laws that had previously blocked the path of putting such officials on trial.
Dink, a Turkish citizen of Armenian origin, was murdered in front of the office of the weekly Armenian-Turkish newspaper Agos on January 19, 2007. Confessed killer Ogün Samast was transferred to a juvenile court in October. His trial was separated from the main murder case due to a legal change that benefited him because he was under the age of 18 on the day of the assassination.
Yasin Hayal, who is accused of abetting the murder, and Erhan Tuncel, a former police informant who claims innocence on the grounds that he told security forces everything he knew months before the murder, are still on trial and under arrest. The only suspects left after three years of the trial, they will be released next year if they are not convicted by that time under a recent legal change that limits arrest periods without conviction to a maximum of five years.
From the beginning, lawyers for the Dink family have stated that the murder was not the work of “three to five nationalist youth.” But even the official inspector’s reports concluding that the National Intelligence Organization (MİT) should be investigated were not enough to allow the questioning of high-ranking suspects from the police, gendarmerie and the MİT.
Before his murder, Dink became the target of a hate campaign, which he wrote about shortly before he died in a column titled, “Why I was Selected as a Target.” A column he wrote in 2004 about allegations that Sabiha Gökçen, the first female pilot in Turkey and the adopted daughter of Turkish Republic founder Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, might have been of Armenian origin was denied with a harsh statement from the chief of General Staff. This official statement is not found on the website of the General Staff.
Members of nationalist circles took a hostile stance against Dink following the issuing of this statement, which noted the article of the Constitution saying “everybody who has a citizenship tie to the Turkish state is a Turk.”
The lawyers for the Dink family argue that the anti-Dink campaign, consisting of protests in front of Agos offices, news stories, columns and criminal complaints for “insulting Turkishness,” were organized efforts.
Dink was sentenced in 2005 for “insulting Turkishness” under Article 301 of the penal law based on a column he wrote, despite expert reports concluding the references he was accused of making were clearly ironic.
The Dink family demanded investigations Monday into the following police and gendarmerie members: Muammer Güler, Ergun Güngör, Celalettin Cerrah, Ahmet İlhan Güler, Bülent Köksal, İbrahim Pala, İbrahim Şevki Eldivan, Volkan Altunbulak, Bahadır Tekin, Özcan Özkan, Ramazan Akyürek, Reşat Altay and Engin Dinç.
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