Intelligence officer tried in Hrant Dink murder case killed

Intelligence officer in the case of slain Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, has been killed while driving.

Hrant Dink was murdered 13 years ago, in front of the former publishing building of the Armenian weekly newspaper Agos. The editor, who had been persecuted by nationalist forces in society and the judiciary for years, was shot dead in the street on 19 January 2007.

Dink had written and spoken at length about the 1915 Armenian Genocide. He was well known for his efforts for reconciliation between Turks and Armenians.

At the time of his death, he was on trial for violating Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code and "denigrating Turkishness". 

The murderer of Hrant Dink was caught shortly after the assassination and later convicted. The masterminds of the state apparatus have still not been brought to justice.

Şeref Ateş, one of those accused in the case, has been killed in the city of Düzce.

A former intelligence officer of the gendarmerie (military police), Ateş was released from prison in December 2017 after getting arrested in the case of the slain journalist.

According to media reports, Ateş was targeted by an armed attack while driving his car in the Çavuşlar neighborhood late last night.

While assailants managed to flee, health teams dispatched to the scene determined that Ateş had been shot dead, his body was drenched in blood in his car.

Background

Dink was assassinated in Istanbul at around 12:00 GMT on 19 January 2007 as he returned to the offices of Agos. 

The killer was reported to have introduced himself as an Ankara University student who wanted to meet with Mr. Dink. When his request was rejected, he waited in front of a nearby bank for a while. According to eyewitnesses, Dink was shot by a man of 25 to 30 years of age, who fired three shots at Dink's head from the back at point blank range before fleeing the scene on foot. According to the police, the assassin was a man of 18 to 19 years of age. Two men had been taken into custody in the first hours of the police investigation, but were later released.

One day after the assassination, the police announced that the shooter had been identified in video footage collected through both the Istanbul MOBESE electronic surveillance network (4,000+ cameras throughout the city) and local security cameras. They later released photos to the public while urging every citizen to aid with the investigation. 

News agencies reported that the shooter had been identified as "Ogün Samast", a teenager born in 1990 and registered as residing in Trabzon.

Samast's father identified him from the publicly released photos and alerted the authorities. Six people, including Samast's friend Yasin Hayal, who had been involved in a bombing of a McDonald's restaurant in Trabzon in 2004, were taken into custody and brought to Istanbul.

On 25 July 2011 Samast was convicted of murder and possession of arms by the Heavy Juvenile Criminal Court. He was sentenced to 22 years and 10 months in prison.

On 16 January 2012 Istanbul 14. Heavy Criminal Court ruled that there was no conspiracy behind the assassination and stated that the murder was an ordinary killing. Yasin Hayal was found guilty of murders and sentenced to life imprisonment, while two other men were found guilty of assisting him and sentenced to 12 years and 6 months in prison.

In 2013 a secret witness told prosecutors of the involvement of JITEM and Gendarmerie in Dink's murder.

On 12 January 2015, arrest warrants were issued for two officers, making them the first public servants arrested in the investigation.