Police: 2 Confess in Journalist Killing
By BENJAMIN HARVEY
Associated Press
Jan 22 2007
ISTANBUL, Turkey – A nationalist militant convicted of bombing a
McDonald’s restaurant in 2004 has confessed to inciting the killing
of an ethnic Armenian journalist last week, police said Monday.
Yasin Hayal told police he provided a gun and money to the teenager
who is suspected of carrying out Friday’s shooting, the Hurriyet
newspaper reported, citing police records.
The teenager, Ogun Samast, was arrested over the weekend along
with several other people and has confessed to fatally shooting the
journalist, according to a chief prosecutor.
Police confirmed the confession, but gave no details.
Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah of Istanbul said Monday that the
suspect was linked to Hayal.
If accurate, Hayal’s reported statements to police would be a strong
indication that the journalist, Hrant Dink, was targeted because of
his public statements on the mass killings of Armenians by Turks
in the early 20th century, one of the nation’s most sensitive and
divisive issues.
Istanbul Gov. Muammer Guler said prosecutors were still investigating
whether the suspect was linked to any organization, although Police
Chief Celalettin Cerrah had said earlier that there was "no political
or organizational dimension" to the slaying.
Dink, the 52-year-old editor of the Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos,
had made public his view that the killings amounted to genocide.
Nationalists consider such statements an insult to Turkey’s honor
and a threat to its unity, and Dink had been showered with insults
and death threats.
Dink was gunned down outside his newspaper’s office in Istanbul on
Friday _ a killing that has drawn attention to the precarious state of
freedom of expression in a country vying for European Union membership.
Turkey has no diplomatic ties with Armenia but still invited Armenian
officials and religious leaders as well as moderate members of the
diaspora to the funeral on Tuesday.
The Vienna-based International Press Institute said the killing was
"a terrible event for Turkish press freedom." It urged Turkey to
eliminate its laws inhibiting dialogue about the Armenian killings,
as well as those that make insulting Turkishness a crime.
Police took Samast, who is 16 or 17, to the crime scene late Sunday
and prosecutors asked him to describe how he killed Dink, the Anatolia
news agency reported on Monday. A small crowd of onlookers shouted
at the suspect, "We’re all Hrants. We’re all Armenians!"
Hayal was convicted in the bombing of a McDonald’s restaurant in
Trabzon in 2004 that injured six people. He was released after serving
more than 10 months in prison. At the time, police could not establish
a link between Hayal and any underground groups, and his motive was
never clear.
Turkey’s relationship with its Armenian minority has long been haunted
by a bloody past. Much of its once-influential Armenian population
was killed or driven out beginning around 1915 in what an increasing
number of nations are calling the first genocide of the 20th century.
Turkey acknowledges that large numbers of Armenians died but vehemently
denies it was genocide, saying the overall figure is inflated and
the deaths occurred in the civil unrest during the collapse of the
Ottoman Empire.
Associated Press writers Suzan Fraser and Selcan Hacaoglu in Ankara
contributed to this report.