MILITARY OFFICERS REJECT TO COOPERATE WITH DINK MURDER PROBERS
The New Anatolian, Turkey
April 25 2008
Two Turkish officers refused to answer questions of the parliamentary
commission charged with probing the murder of journalist Hirant Dink
by an ultranationalist gang.
Some gendarmerie soldiers recently told a court hearing that they
knew of the preparations to assassiate Dink and had informed their
superiors about it.
The two Turkish gendarmerie officers were summoned Thursday at a
human rights commission of Turkish parliament over the killing of
Turkish-Armenian journalist, but they refused to give information
about the case until after being heard by a court of law.
Col. Ali Oz, former gendarmerie commander of the Black Sea province
of Trabzon, and Capt. Metin Yildiz, Trabzon’s former gendarmerie
intelligence chief, also failed to respond to attend an earlier call
by the commission early in April.
"We are here today out of our respect for the parliament but we
will not make any statements before our testimonies are heard by the
court. We can brief the committee in detail after the court hearing,"
Col. Oz was quoted as saying.
Hrant Dink was shot outside the office of his Agos newspaper in
Istanbul in January 2007. Police arrested the gunman and a suspected
associate who was identified as Yasin Hayal.
Acting on the testimonies of two other gendarmerie officers who were
arrested on the charges of "neglect of duty," a Trabzon court ordered
a probe against 10 gendarmerie officers, including Oz and Yildiz.
Lawyers of Dink’s family have said in a petition that "the probed
gendarmerie officers had known that Hayal and his friends had been
making plans to kill Dink as early as July 2006, but they had failed
to take necessary measures in an open neglect of duty."
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress