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Turkish academic to be tried for signing peace petition

December 5, 2017 By administrator

Some 150 academics who signed a petition calling for peace in Turkey’s Kurdish regions are now facing trial. Uraz Aydin, the editor of the leftwing journal Yeniyol faces additional charges of terrorist propaganda.

A few days before his trial resumed, DW met 41-year-old Uraz Aydin in an Istanbul café. Nearly a year ago, he was among a group of academics who signed a peace petition. Shortly thereafter, he, like many others in the group, lost his job as a research associate at Marmara University’s Faculty of Communication. A new law under the state of emergency that went into effect in February 2017 provided the grounds for his dismissal.

It was a hard blow for Aydin. He enjoyed his job at the university and now longs for everything he had to leave behind after his eight years of research. He himself had studied communication sciences at Marmara University before going on to write his doctoral thesis at the Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales (INALCO) in Paris.

Aydin’s doctoral thesis explored how leftist liberal ideas are conveyed through Turkish columnists. “I am active in the union and have never concealed my leftist identity. But I did feel the consequences of this. While some of my students even got teaching positions at the university, I did not have such a position at the university.”

Life-changing signature

But Aydin could never have imagined how signing the peace petition would impact his life. He signed the appeal at a time when he and other academics felt they could no longer accept the prevailing conditions. “My friends and I have asked ourselves whether our signatures drove the country to where it is now. We set the agenda for the country. And then it took control of our lives.”

Last year, after many years of work as a research assistant, Aydin applied for a position as a lecturer and was actually promised a job. The next day, however, he found out that the names of the academics who signed the peace petition were passed on to the university council. “So my joy lasted only one day,” he said.

From that day on, he began waiting for the release of a list of names gathered under the state of emergency law. When he found his name on the list, he was relieved. “It was already clear to us that passing our names on to the university council would mean our dismissal. The waiting was a strain. It just makes you think, ‘Come what may.'”

Strength in solidarity

Aydin’s eyes light up when he recalls the day he went to the office to gather his belongings. The solidarity he received made him emotional. He was not able to take all the books he had accumulated in the past 29 years. Now in his forties, he felt a deep shock at having to leave the university he came to at the age of 19.

“The state accuses you of terrorist propaganda and you receive tremendous solidarity. It gives you the strength to carry on. But at times, you feel you’re the victim of a great injustice. Who is tearing me out of this place where I’ve spent so many years, and with what right?”

Uraz Aydin’s trial began immediately after his dismissal from the university. The prosecution states that the published petition is terrorist propaganda. A statement by Bese Hozat, co-chairman of the Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK), dated December 27, 2015, is also being used as evidence. The KCK is considered to be the extended arm of the PKK, which Turkey has classified as a terrorist organization.

No fresh start abroad

Uraz Aydin has not considered starting a new life for himself abroad. He does not want to force his young son to experience what he himself went through. Aydin grew up in Paris, after his father had to leave Turkey following a military coup on September 12, 1980. It was not until the amnesty of 1991 that Aydin’s family was able to return to Turkey.

He says that while times are tough for academics in Turkey, he is convinced that he is on the right side. Then, suddenly, he pulls out a book: Nuriye Gulmen’s Turkish translation of “The Hesse/Mann Letters,” an exchange between Nobel laureates Thomas Mann and Hermann Hesse. The translator was also a signatory who lost her job and she is currently on a hunger strike. The quote that Aydin reads out loud from the book summarizes his opinion on the trial: “We are experiencing malice in all its horror. This experience, which we were forced to accept, makes us discover the good in our lives.”

Source: http://www.dw.com/en/turkish-academic-to-be-tried-for-signing-peace-petition/a-41647581

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: academic, Trial, Turkish

Turkish Businessman Describes $50M Bribe at Sanctions Trial

November 30, 2017 By administrator

In this courtroom sketch, Turkish-Iranian gold trader Reza Zarrab, center, testifies before Judge Richard Berman, right, that he helped Iran evade U.S. economic sanctions with help from Turkish banker Mehmet Hakan Atilla, Nov. 29, 2017, in New York. At left is an interpreter.

NEW YORK — A Turkish-Iranian gold trader testified at a New York trial Wednesday that he paid over $50 million in bribes to Turkey’s economy minister in 2012 to overcome a banker’s fears he was too well-known in Turkey to launder Iranian money in violation of U.S. sanctions.

Reza Zarrab calmly described his arrangement with one of Turkey’s most important public officials as he began what will be several days on the witness stand at the trial of Turkish banker Mehmet Hakan Atilla, who is charged in a conspiracy that involved bribes and kickbacks to high-level officials.

In a conversation about shady transactions involving suitcases stuffed with gold, the economy minister, Zafer Caglayan, “asked about the profit margin,” Zarrab testified. “And he said, ‘I can broker this.’ ”

Zarrab’s decision to plead guilty and cooperate with U.S. investigators — revealed Tuesday on the trial’s first day — was a surprise twist in the trial. The prosecution seemed in jeopardy just months earlier after Zarrab tried to free himself by hiring prominent and politically connected American attorneys to try to arrange a prisoner transfer between Turkey and the United States. The effort by former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and former U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey failed.

Prisoner’s outfit

The government’s star witness appeared before jurors Wednesday in federal court in Manhattan wearing tan prisoner scrubs, even though he testified he was released from jail two weeks ago and into FBI custody. At the end of the day with the jury gone, the judge asked Zarrab why he was wearing the outfit, telling prosecutors he would sign an order allowing him to wear civilian clothes if he wanted.

Once Zarrab, 34, was on the stand, prosecutors wasted no time in getting him to name names and muddy reputations in the banking industry and in government.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Sidhardha Kamaraju elicited details of what the United States has said was a well-orchestrated conspiracy to evade U.S. sanctions against Iran and enable $1 billion in Iranian oil proceeds to move through international banking markets.

Zarrab said he ran into resistance from a Halkbank executive when he approached the Turkish government-owned bank in late 2011 or early 2012 to try to gain access to Iranian money through trades in gold. The executive, he said, feared that Zarrab’s marriage to Turkish pop star and TV personality Ebru Gundes made him “too popular” to make the trades.

“I was a person who was in the public eye all of the time,” he said.

Undeterred, Zarrab said he met with Caglayan, who was economy minister when President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was prime minister. Caglayan told him he would smooth the way for gold trades, but only if he got half the profits, which he said ended up totaling more than $50 million.

Diagrams drawn

At one point, Zarrab drew diagrams for the jury to illustrate the elaborate web of transactions used to beat the economic sanctions and make him a fortune as the middleman.

The tactics included using Iranian proceeds from gas and oil sales to Turkey to buy gold, having couriers carry the gold in suitcases to Dubai, converting it back into cash that was deposited in a front company account, and laundering the money with multiple bank transfers, including some through the United States.

Zarrab testified that the sanction-evasion scheme was done in consultation with Atilla, a 47-year-old former deputy CEO of Halkbank who has pleaded not guilty. A lawyer for Atilla attacked Zarrab’s credibility Tuesday during opening statements, saying the trial is about Zarrab’s crimes.

Caglayan is indicted in the U.S. case. The indictment describes his alleged role in the gold-transfer scheme and in another scheme in which he and other Turkish government officials supposedly approved of and directed the movement of Iranian oil proceeds by claiming they were connected to the sale of food and medicine to Iran from Dubai.

Erdogan has called on American authorities to “review” the decision to indict Caglayan, saying the former minister had not engaged in any wrongdoing because Turkey had not imposed sanctions on Iran, an important trade partner.

The prosecution of Zarrab has been major news in Turkey, where Erdogan has repeatedly asked the U.S. to release him and more recently portrayed the U.S. case as a sham.

Source: https://www.voanews.com/a/turkish-businessman-describes-bribe-at-sanctions-trial/4143027.html

Filed Under: News Tagged With: businessman, Trial, Turkish

The Talk of Turkey? A Politically Charged Trial in New York

November 26, 2017 By administrator

Reza Zarrab, a Turkish-Iranian businessman accused of conspiracy to violate United States sanctions against Iran, is scheduled to go on trial in New York on Monday. Credit Ozan Kose/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

By CARLOTTA GALL and BENJAMIN WEISER

ISTANBUL — The trial is about to start in a Lower Manhattan courtroom, but it is the talk of Turkish government officials, television and even cafes.

Turkey is churning over the prosecution by the American authorities of two prominent Turks accused of conspiring to violate United States sanctions against Iran. After a failed campaign to persuade American officials to drop the case, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan last week turned to damage control, angrily denigrating the whole judicial process.

On Monday, jury selection is to begin in the Federal District Court trial amid broad speculation that the lead defendant, Reza Zarrab, who is accused of managing a billion-dollar scheme to smuggle gold for Iranian oil, has entered into a plea bargain with the prosecution and may reveal damaging evidence about corruption and illegal dealings in high places.

If Mr. Zarrab has indeed become a government witness, prosecutors are still expected to proceed to trial against a co-defendant, Mehmet Hakan Atilla, a Turkish banker who has pleaded not guilty. Seven other defendants have been charged but remain at large, prosecutors have said.

Mr. Zarrab’s arrest in March 2016 — while on a family trip to Disney World — raised tensions between Turkey and the United States, and on the eve of trial, relations between the two NATO allies are now at their lowest point in years.

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/26/world/europe/erdogan-reza-zarrab-trial.html?smid=nytcore-ipad-share&smprod=nytcore-ipad

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: new york, reza zarrab, Trial, Turkey

German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel seeks tougher EU line on Turkey

August 5, 2017 By administrator

Hundreds face judges in Turkey coup trial

Hundreds face judges in Turkey coup trial

Gabriel wrote a letter to EU leaders slamming Turkish President Erdogan’s politics and calling for the bloc to scale back its relations with Ankara. His statements underline an icy relationship with no thaw in sight.

Germany’s foreign minister called on the European Union (EU) to take harsher measures against the government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the German weekly magazine Der Spiegel reported on Friday.

Der Spiegel saw a letter from Sigmar Gabriel dated July 24 to EU top diplomat Federica Mogherini and the Commissioner for EU Enlargement Johannes Hahn. In it, the German minister described Erdogan’s politics as being “in blatant contradiction to our European value system and (demanding) a clear answer.”

Gabriel also accused Ankara of counteracting the EU’s efforts to maintain a good relationship “through increasingly aggressive and unconstructive politics,” the foreign minister wrote.

Gabriel’s words reflect a growing tensions between the EU and Turkey. The EU has criticized Erdogan’s government for imprisoning alleged supporters of terrorism, including German-Turkish journalist Deniz Yucel, and purging thousands of perceived political opponents from the ranks of government, education and military after the failed July 2016 coup.

The dispute between Berlin and Ankara recently escalated after Turkey detained human rights activists including German national Peter Steudtner.

Germany has also pulled its troops from the Turkish airbase in Incirlik after a spat over access to the base.

Read more: What is Turkey’s Incirlik air base?

Harsher measures

In his letter, Gabriel called on the EU to reduce pre-accession help provided to Turkey. The non-EU member country has been in full membership talks since 2005. The talks have stalled for years.

Gabriel additionally outlined that aid should only be provided within the framework of initiatives that foster democracy and rule of law in order to assist Turkish civil organizations instead of Erdogan’s government.

His proposals for harsher measures also extended to the realm of Turkish businesses. The foreign minister said that the European Investment Bank (EIB), the union’s non-profit lending institution that seeks to foster European integration and social cohesion, should curtail its financial support for future projects in Turkey.

“The basic principle should be that we do not attempt new business initiatives right now,” Gabriel wrote, in relation to EIB financing.

Gabriel’s letter was dated one day before Mogherini, Hahn and EU affairs minister Omer Celik met with Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu in Brussels to discuss the relationship between EU and Turkey including future membership in the bloc, immigration and Turkey’s demands for visa-free travel for its citizens.

In the aftermath of the meeting, the EU leaders announced that Turkey’s long-standing desire to join the EU had been frozen for the time being, although talks between Brussels and Ankara would continue.

Other politicians across the EU have called upon the bloc to take a stronger stance against Turkey. The European Parliament in Strasbourg held a non-binding vote in early July to suspend membership talks with Ankara.

The European Council also resolved not to open new areas in membership talks with Turkey.

Turkey’s request to join the EU has yet to be formally suspended.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: coup, Trial, Turkey

Turkish newspaper Cumhuriyet faces nebulous accusations in trial

July 24, 2017 By administrator

Turkish journalist on TrialEmployees of the Turkish newspaper Cumhuriyet are being tried on charges including the alleged support of “terrorist organizations.” The case is seen as a indicator of the state of the Turkish justice system.

The Cumhuriyet journalists may be looking at very long jail sentences. The defendants, whose trial began on Monday, could get between seven-and-a-half and 43 years in prison. What exactly they are charged with, however, remains unclear.

The group includes some of the best known names in Turkish media, such as the Kadri Gursel, the paper’s chief editor Murat Sabuncu, cartoonist Musa Kart, and investigative reporter Ahmet Sik.

According to the prosecutors, the 19 reporters are on trial for “aiding an armed terrorist group without being mebers of it.” Two of these groups are named: the movement around the preacher Fethullah Gulen, and the banned Kurdistan Workers’ Party or PKK. Critics slammed the accusations as vague.

“Kadri Gursel […] is one of the country’s leading writers and opinion-formers,” DW’s Dorian Jones from said on Monday Istanbul. “He wrote a column for a very prominent newspaper and was ousted because of a tweet the president (Erdogan) didn’t like.”

“He is accused of not only supporting the Kurdish rebel group the PKK, which has kidnapped him two decades ago, but on top of that he is also accused of supporting the Islamic cleric Fethullah Gulen, who is a person Kadri Gursel has written expansively about, exposing and criticizing for many years,” Jones told DW News.

The first week of the group trial is likely to be taken up by prosecutors reading out the indictment and defense lawyers giving their opening statements. At the end of this segment, however, the judges will decide whether to release some of the defendants on bail. Twelve of the reporters are currently in jail, five have already been released from custody pending the outcome of the trial, and the last two, including Cumhuriyet former editor-in-chief Can Dundar, are being tried in absentia. Dundar is currently in Germany.

The case of Ahmet Sik gives some indication of the sort of thing the public prosecutor’s office deems to be such an offense. Sik, an investigative journalist, was arrested at the end of December 2016. The public prosecutor referenced posts on his Twitter account as grounds for the arrest. Anadolu reported that the investigation was based on claims that Sik was “denigrating the Republic of Turkey, its judicial bodies, military and security organization” and “propagandizing for a terrorist organization” in his Twitter postings and in some articles he had published in the Cumhuriyet daily.

Sik went after Gulen at wrong time

What Ahmed Sik did was primarily to ask questions and highlight inconsistencies in government propaganda. For example, in some of his tweets he considered the case of the Russian ambassador to Turkey, Andrei Karlov. Karlov was shot on 19 November, 2016, by a former policeman with jihadi motives. The government says the gunman was a follower of the Gulen movement. In that case, Sik asked on Twitter, how did they explain the fact that the assassin was a police officer?

Sik also addressed the arrest of the actor, director and politician Sırrı Sureyya Onder, who represented the pro-Kurdish opposition HDP in the Turkish parliament. Together with former deputy prime minister of Turkey, Yalcin Akdogan, Onder published a statement proposing a possible solution for the Kurdish conflict. The member of parliament was then arrested and charged with supporting a terrorist organization. Sik’s conclusion: “If the action which [Peoples’ Democratic Party MP] Sırrı Sureyya Onder is being charged with is a crime, isn’t there supposed to be a bunch of suspects, starting with those sitting in the [Presidential] Palace?”

Sik had already spent a year in prison in 2011 and 2012. Back then, his crime was to criticize the Gulen movement’s influence within the apparatus of state – precisely what Erdogan is doing today. The only difference is that, at that time, Erdogan and Gulen were still the best of friends.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Journalist, Trial, Turkish

Turkey: 10 years of Dink murder trial

January 18, 2017 By administrator

( AGOS) One of the judges of the Dink murder case said, “Think about a book about the murder process during the trial, and when you start to read it, you know what will happen eventually.” The process leading to Hrant Dink’s death can be described exactly as such.

UYGAR GULETEKIN
CRASH IN THE EYES

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, ” Never A murder will not disappear in the dark corridors of Ankara “ He said. Will Dink’s murder be lost in those chambers but murder is not known exactly three of those corridors I kt.

T u rkiye oil ending the history of political killings and cases of political killings that I yl filled. Dink davas i n i n u ser and UnUysA, political murders and other requirements from slightly different from then. Dink’s murder from behind he’ll be the judge LA evil llama s s u rec, Dunk davas i n i n a ‘never-ending litigation the caravan’ s concern that it will be s i fortify şi tu. T u rkiye evil mother in the political climate or three alkant i s, these three alkant i s t i n three LIGHT Three implicated in Dink davas the mist in the heat a little bit of a crack.

Dink’s murder has some public officials and the judiciary today u in front of. Some accompanying cinema d i n g gendarmerie personnel are burned when the item was arrested. Ö On the other hand, the National Intelligence Organization Some like Institutions and some that make Dink the target Names still jurisdiction not speak business into three k Ken, ‘hit the order’ s Network i still do not know who gave. Therefore, in case you get a little smokescreen range launched in GI was still lying on the floor

Dink after the trial started s rec of murder, it was like all other political murders in T he then began trials of the past. Judicial Network i laman s continued in the first five Three per year five Did not go beyond the shooter, the investigation was not extended. Despite showing public officials, the Gendarmerie, MIT and Security officials were tried to keep as far as possible from the case file. Since the lama’s first judicial hearing, Dink family lawyers An effective investigation into gendarmerie officials Though these requests were not accepted. No single transaction was made in the investigation file.

All these investigative decisions and given the government the ‘community’ between the fighting had not yet begun.

before murder

“Hrant Dink is our goal”

Hrant Dink’s participation in the leftist political movements in Turkey many years before he established the Agos Journal known. Dink was probably under the custody of the state like everyone else involved in these movements. Years later, as the trial for death continues, detainee intelligence Police chief Ali Fuat Yilmazzer said they had been following Dink since the 70s.

After setting up the Agos newspaper, Dink changed the ‘category’ as well as the reason for follow-up. Hrant Dink has not been allowed to go abroad for many years without a passport. Because it was ‘the target of the state’; The state was exactly describing it. Years after the death of Dink Intelligence Branch, ” Hrant Dink Armenian activities within the scope of our target, ” he said Dink’un pursued. The date of the writing was 1997. So 10 years ago, before Dink was killed …

The first record I assassination

Agos to the humble publishing life, Dink Continued to write at the newspaper corner. The first death threat entered the state records in January 2003. Acting on a tip that the Dink assassination will go to Sydney in the letter s d was yleniy.

The “Armenian Identity”, the excuse for making Hrant Dink a target, Titled article Series was launched in Agos on 7 November 2003. For the Armenians in Turkey, although quite challenging each period, especially life even harder for an evil genocide of Armenians in Turkey when it comes to the agenda of any of the European parliament formed. Y d crease the Armenians as it becomes constant and even reached the summit of the state language We went to the s d hate ylem As of 2003, then increased to three; It is necessary to demand protection. In January 2004, Mesrob Mutafyan, the patriarch of the Turkish Armenians, applied to the Governor of Istanbul to protect the Armenian institutions wanted. Two days after the application of Agos newspaper Hrant Dink s signature them with “get away from Turkey entitled ‘ article Published.

 

Read More: https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=tr&u=http://www.agos.com.tr/tr/yazi/17489/dink-cinayeti-davasinin-10-yili&prev=search

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Hrant dink, murder, Trial, Turkey

Prosecutor in ‘Nardaran Trial’ Calls For Life Sentence For Azerbaijani Theologian

December 30, 2016 By administrator

Theologian Taleh Bagirzade was the target of a police raid in the Azerbaijani village of Nardaran last year, in which at least six people were died (file photo).

The prosecution has called for lengthy prison sentences for 18 men who are accused of plotting to overthrow the Azerbaijani government, but are considered by human rights activists to be prisoners of conscience.

Most of the 18 were apprehended during a police raid in late November 2015 in the village of Nardaran, where many locals look to Iranian clerics in Qom for religious guidance, rather than to the Baku-based Spiritual Board of Muslims of the Caucasus.

The target of the police raid was theologian Taleh Bagirzade, 33, who in early 2015 co-founded the still unregistered Movement for Muslim Unity, the objective of which, he said, is to establish a democratic secular state in which leaders are popularly elected.

Bagirzade was apprehended on the night of the raid at the home in Nardaran of Movement for Muslim Unity co-founder Vagif Bunyadov.

Two police officers and at least four Nardaran residents were killed in a struggle, accounts of which are contradictory, between police and supporters seeking to prevent Bagirzade’s arrest. According to a joint statement by Azerbaijan’s Interior Ministry and Prosecutor-General’s Office, the men opened fire and hurled Molotov cocktails at the police.

The accused, however, insist they were unarmed. One of them, Bahruz Asadov, was quoted as saying in court on August 11 that he heard police warning each other to aim carefully so as not to risk injuring their colleagues.

The most prominent of Bagirzade’s 17 co-defendants is Fuad Gahramanly, deputy chairman of the opposition Azerbaijan Popular Front Party (AHCP). Gahramanly was arrested 12 days after the Nardaran raid on the basis of a Facebook post branding “unjust” the arrest of Bagirzade and other Nardaran residents. He was subsequently charged with calling for mass unrest and violence.

Torture Allegations

The 18 accused went on trial in early August at Baku’s Court for Serious Crimes on charges of premeditated murder, terrorism, organizing mass unrest, illegal possession of weapons, creating armed formations, inciting religious hatred, using force against officials with the aim of overthrowing the government and seizing power, and other more minor offenses.

All pleaded not guilty. Some say they incriminated themselves under torture during pretrial questioning. Others admitted having signed a confession they had not read. The court has refused to investigate the allegations of torture.

Lawyers for the accused say the case against them was fabricated, and that witnesses were pressured. Four of the five police officers summoned to testify in mid-October could not positively identify any of the accused as having participated in the fracas.

Bagirzade’s lawyer Yalchin Imanov sought without success earlier this month to have Azerbaijani Interior Minister Ramil Usubov summoned for questioning about discrepancies between his statement in an interview on national TV that the police operation was launched on orders from Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in light of the criminal situation in Nardaran, and the formal indictment, according to which police had received information that Bagirzade was planning a coup d’etat. In addition, Usubov said five Nardaran residents were killed during the fracas, while the indictment gives the figure as four.

Why Local Police?

A second defense lawyer, Abil Bayramov, similarly made the point during an earlier court session that, if police had obtained information that Bagirzade and his supporters were planning acts of terrorism, National Security Ministry forces with the appropriate training should have been deployed to round them up, rather than local police.

Movement for Muslim Unity deputy head Abbas Guseynov has denied the prosecution’s charge that he fired 25 shots at police, without hitting any of them.

Bagirzade has demanded without success that video footage of the raid filmed by the police should be shown in court.

Testifying in early August, Bagirzade accused the Azerbaijani authorities of deliberately seeking to provoke a confrontation in Nardaran in order to create a pretext for quashing his movement. He stressed that he has never advocated violence, and suggested that the police action to detain him was “carefully planned” in retaliation for criticism voiced by the Movement for Muslim Unity of blatant falsification during the parliamentary elections on November 1.

Bagirzade also said that he had been subjected to torture to induce him to incriminate AHCP Chairman Ali Kerimli and opposition National Council of Democratic Forces head Camil Hasanli, which he refused to do.

On December 26, the prosecution demanded life imprisonment for Bagirzade, 11 years in jail for Gahramanly, and between 10 and 20 years for their co-defendants.

Meanwhile, dozens of other men are reportedly still awaiting trial on analogous charges, some of whom were reportedly arrested in Baku, Gence, Lankaran, and other cities.

Source: http://www.rferl.org/a/caucasus-report-azerbaijan-nardaran-raid-bagirzade-trial/28200261.html?ltflags=mailer

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Nardaran, Trial

Sweden: Barbaros Leylani faces trial for making insulting remarks about Armenians

December 1, 2016 By administrator

barbaros-trialThe Turkish politician, who made insulting remarks about Armenians during last year’s anti-Armenian demonstration organized by Azerbaijani and Turkish population at Sergels Square in the center of the Swedish capital, had to stand in front of the court. Ermenihaber reports referring to ANF agency.

Already former Vice Chairman of Turkish National Association Barbaros Leylani, who called for the death of “Armenian dogs” during the protest, has recently testified in the court.
Leylani has commented on his statements claiming that “being in a bad psychological state, he delivered his speech on the spot without preparing it previously”. Turning to the word “dog” he has noted that he used the remark to accuse those Armenians who support terrorism, and it did not refer to the peaceful citizens.

At the end of his testimony he said “I apologize” in response to the judge’s question whether the defendant has anything to add.

Noting that the statements made by Leylani incite hatred towards an ethnic group, the Prosecutor has asked to impose a suspended sentence and a fine. The verdict will be issued on 14 December.

One of the Swedish TV channels broadcast the video of the anti-Armenian speech, which was followed by heavy criticism. Afterwards Leylani said that he made the remarks driven out of impulses and they should not be considered threats.

However his justifications were not accepted and he had to resign from the position of the Vice Chairman. In addition to this, over 50 Armenian, Kurdish and Swedish organizations operating in Stockholm submitted applications to the Prosecutor’s Office demanding to punish Leylani.

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Barbaros Leylani, Sweden, Trial

Turkey: Gulen-linked police chiefs to stand trial for Dink’s murder

April 18, 2016 By administrator

turkey.thumbFollowing a court’s approval to merge two cases, former police chiefs linked to the controversial Gülen Movement will stand side-by-side with the murder convicts of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink for the first time, the Daily Sabah reports. 
The police chiefs are accused of negligence and orchestrating a cover-up before and after the 2007 murder, which sparked public outrage.
Dink, the late editor-in-chief of Agos daily, was shot dead in front of his office in Istanbul by Ogün Samast, a 17-year-old teenager who claimed he shot Dink for his anti-Turkish views. The murder, initially considered to be committed by far-right nationalists, later turned out to be a larger plot, and several police intelligence officers were arrested for deliberately covering up intelligence on the murder plot. Moreover, several police chiefs indicted in the case are accused of links to the Gülen Movement, the umbrella term used to describe the Gülenist Terror Organization (FETÖ), which is behind two alleged coup attempts in 2013, according to prosecutors.
The suspects will appear before an Istanbul court tomorrow in the case mired with allegations of corruption after former prosecutors looking into the case claimed to cover the tracks of the Gülen-linked officers’ role in the murder. The hearings will continue for three days.
The Gulen Movement is accused of trying to shift blame for the murder onto others, including the Ergenekon, an alleged gang of generals, journalists and several prominent figures who were imprisoned after a trial conducted by Gülenist prosecutors. All defendants in the Ergenekon case were released years later, after investigations revealed they were imprisoned by prosecutors and judges close to the movement based on forged and tampered evidence.
The court had earlier accepted the indictment of 26 suspects in the Dink case. Suspects include former Intelligence Department directors of the Turkish National Police, Engin Dinç and Ramazan Akyürek, former intelligence director of the Istanbul Police, Ali Fuat Yılmazer, and intelligence officers Muhittin Zenit, Ercan Demir and Özkan Mumcu. Akyürek, who was police chief in Trabzon – the hometown of Samast and his alleged accomplice, Yasin Hayal – faces aggravated life sentence. He is charged with running a terrorist organization, homicide, forgery of official documents, destroying official documents and abuse of duty. Yılmazer faces life in prison for similar charges while other officers are subject to lesser sentences for negligence and causing manslaughter by negligence as well as hiding evidence. Akyürek was arrested in February 2015 upon orders from an Istanbul court, just one day after he was detained for questioning regarding the Dink murder, while Yılmazer was arrested earlier in a separate case involving the Gülenists.
The Supreme Court of Appeals ordered the merger of two separate cases in January, marking a legal victory for Dink’s family who sought to shed light on the officials’ role in the murder. The murder took place after Dink was warned by Istanbul authorities over his work. A local official testified to the court after the murder and countered allegations that Dink was threatened with death after running a story claiming a prominent Turkish figure was in fact an Armenian woman. The official said Dink was warned against “stirring public outrage.”
Dink, an outspoken critic of both the Turkish and Armenian stance toward the mass deaths of Armenians in 1915 – labeled as “genocide” by Armenia, a term rejected by Turkey – drew ire among hardline nationalists during his lifetime. His call for the resolution of the controversial issue led to numerous death threats before his murder. He also faced several lawsuits for “denigrating Turkishness,” an act constitutionally punishable with prison time, for his articles and editorials regarding the issue.
The Gulen Movement, led by U.S.-based retired preacher Fethullah Gülen, is accused of having infiltrated Turkey’s police departments and judiciaries as well as the higher echelons of the bureaucracy. Gülenists currently face a number of trials as the judiciary, which saw a purge of prosecutors and judges linked to the movement, stepped up efforts against FETÖ. A large number of the group’s members were arrested or wanted in multiple cases ranging from illegal wiretapping to conspiring to imprison critics of the movement, money laundering and defrauding the state. Gülen is the prime suspect in all cases as head of the FETÖ and rejects returning to Turkey from Pennsylvania where he resides while Turkey seeks to speed up his extradition process

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: chiefs, Gülen-linked, Hrant dink, police, Trial, Turkey

Syria: Trial of Kurdish fighters have damaged property

January 21, 2016 By administrator

The main Syrian Kurdish militia said Tuesday it arrested four of its fighters accused of damaged properties in a community decision to jihadist Islamic State Group (EI).

This news comes after accusations of activists and Amnesty International on abuse of Kurdish forces against Arab residents in areas listed in EI in northern Syria.

In a statement, the Kurdish people’s Protection Units (YPG) indicate that four of its members were arrested “on charges of damaging property of citizens in al-Hol and surrounding villages” in the province of Hasaka (northeast).

“At the end of the investigation and interrogations, their membership of YPG was withdrawn and they will go on trial in court” the statement said.

The four defendants were identified by their initials and pictures of them taken back were broadcast.

Al-Hol was taken in November at the EI by a coalition of Kurdish and Arab fighters.

The arrests come in the wake of several reports of tensions between the YPG and the Arab inhabitants of the northern regions of Syria where the militia led battles against the IE with air support from the coalition led by the United STATES.

In October, Amnesty International accused the Kurdish forces to engage in forced displacement and destruction of homes in the north and northeast of the country consideration of these acts of “war crimes”.

The NGO claimed that they were carrying out “collective punishment campaigns” against residents, Arab majority, villages formerly held by the EI.

YPG had denounced these accusations and emphasized its alliance with Arab combatant groups which “removes any doubt” in their desire on any discrimination against an ethnic group.

Amnesty and activists also accused the Kurdish forces to prevent people from returning to their village after the EI has been driven.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (OSDH) had recently reported demonstrations in Al-Hol people wanting to go home.

According to Kurdish forces, residents were not allowed to return during clearance operations or in places where the risk remained infiltration of IE.

Thursday, January 21, 2016,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Arab, fighters, Kurdish, Syria, Trial

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