Ogün Samast, the man who confessed to the murder of journalist and writer Hrant Dink, will be tried in juvenile court. The reason of this decision is the fact that Samast was a minor at the time of the crime after he confessed to the murder. Director of Armenian paper Agos, Hrant Dink, was killed in January 2007. He was shot at close range on the street, just after he left his office in Istanbul.
At the 15th hearing of the Dink trial at the 14th High Criminal Court on Monday, the young man's defense lawyer, Levent Yýldýrým, confirmed that he had requested that court on Oct. 21 allow Samast to be tried in juvenile court since he was a minor, 17-years old, at the time of the incident. Yýldýrým, who referred to the “Law of Amendment to the Counter-terrorism Law” asked for a transfer to juvenile court for his client.
Güray Dað, a co-plaintiff attorney for the Dink family, said that Samast should be tried with the other suspects in the same court. But the court has accepted Yýldýrým’s request. The presiding judge decided that according to the new TMK, the current court lacks of subject-matter jurisdiction.
Hosrof Dink, Hrant Dink’s brother, reacted to the presiding judge’s verdict by saying that justice is not being served.
Dink was the director of the bilingual, Armenian and Turkish, Agos weekly until he was killed on Jan. 19, 2007. Lawyers representing the Dink family have long alleged that the murder was the doing of Ergenekon, a clandestine group charged with plotting to overthrow the government.