Assassin Who Is Declared A Hero - Turkey PDF Print Email

Presented by Acilim Legal Bureau, Turkey

30 May 2010


One of  the national minority groups in Turkey consists of the  Armenians. Like many minority “nations” and sects, Armenians were subject to genocide and massacre by the Turkish state. The Armenian genocide, which resulted with the deaths of around one million Armenians, is a popular topic still on the agenda of many countries in the world. So much so that US presidents release statements on the subject at every anniversary and Congress issues “denunciations”

Naturally, because of the denial by the Turkish state as perpetrator of this genocide, and its ongoing antagonistic attitude, the question has become an issue of debate, conflict and aggression in Turkey. The most concrete example of this situation is the gunning down and killing of the Armenian journalist and writer Hrant Dink, owner and editor of the Agos newspaper, on 19 January 2007 by a 17-year-old fascist by the name of Ogün Samast.


Hrant Dink had already been a target of reactions and anger due to his progressive and oppositionist  stance, in addition to his “national” origins. News alleging that Sabiha Gökçen, the adoptive daughter of the founder of the Turkish state, Mustafa Kemal, was Armenian, was published in the newspaper. In response to this, the General Staff of the Armed Forces issued a statement on 22 February 2004 to the effect that this allegation was a serious assault on the national unity and integrity of Turkey. Following suit, Hrant Dink was called to the Istanbul Governor’s Office, where he was threatened by the vice governor and two intelligence officers. Along the same path, a chauvinist campaign was begun; racist groups held demonstrations in front of the Agos newspaper and threatened Hrant Dink, saying “you are the target of our anger”.

After these developments, the  criminal case alleging that Turkishness was belittled in another of his articles; Hrant Dink was convicted and his sentence was to be confirmed by the Appeals Court.  The lynch campaign heated up even more after the verdict in this case. Meanwhile, another lawsuit was opened against Hrant Dink for having said in an interview for the Reuters News Agency, referring to the Armenian massacre, “of course it is genocide.”

At the conclusion of this process, Hrant Dink was murdered. The next day, the perpetrator of the murder was captured and taken to the Police Headquarters, where he was treated as if he were a hero. Photographs were taken of him holding a Turkish flag, together with many members of the Gendarmerie and police officers, with a sign at the bottom reading, “the motherland is sacred, it cannot be abandoned”. In his initial statement, he said that he killed Hrant Dink because he insulted Turkishness.

Ninteen persons were charged in this murder for having organized the assassination of Hrant Dink. During the investigation, it came out that, about a year prior to the murder, all of the state security and intelligence units (the Gendarmerie, Police, and MIT – the National Intelligence Agency) had detailed information about it, and even more, that they were actually part of the events leading up to it, and that they concealed and altered evidence after the murder in order to exonerate themselves. Despite this coming out into the open, the Istanbul Prosecutor’s Office made the decision to open an administrative investigation and accuse these people of “dereliction or misuse of position”, citing a law pertaining to the bringing of court cases against civil servants.

However, despite many officials being responsible, only 2 persons connected to a lower division of the Gendarmerie Command in Trabzon, which organized the murder, were charged with the simple offense of “dereliction of duty”. At a March 2008 hearing of a case pertaining to this, it was discovered that although there had been detailed intelligence about the murder, and this information had been sent to all concerned, including the Provincial Gendarmerie Command, intentionally, no precautions were taken. As a result, six members of the Gendarmerie were charged, but the contents of the charge were not changed. The only case where civil servants are charged as being responsible for Dink’s murder is this case, which is just for show.


The first and most important stop along the road leading to Dink’s murder was the statement issued by the General Staff of the Armed Forces and the convictions in the court case against him. Despite there being intelligence that a number of public servants had organized and others had committed this murder, precautions were intentionally not taken and some of the evidence pertaining to the murder was destroyed. Some civil servants were involved in the whole investigation. Therefore, this murder investigation was intentionally inadequate, resulting in only the person who pulled the trigger and a handful of persons around him being charged. This process and so-called court case is not intent on solving the murder and finding the real murderers, but covering up the perpetrators, who organized the murder and chose the murdered  to liquidate him, and the reasons for it.