New remand in the north for murder suspects
By Simon Bahceli
A TURKISH Cypriot court yesterday ruled that the five men held on suspicion of murdering businessman Elmas Guzelyurt and two members of his family would remain in custody for a further five days.
The case has caused a bitter dispute between judiciaries on either side of the Green Line, with both sides insisting they have the authority to try the suspects. While the Turkish Cypriot police hold the five suspects, the Republic’s police have the evidence that could convict the men.
Guzelyurtlu, his wife Zerrin and fifteen year-old daughter Eylul were found executed, each by a single bullet to the head, early in the morning of January 15 on the Nicosia to Larnaca road.
Neither side are willing to hand either evidence or suspects to the other side, and with virtually no evidence of their own it remains doubtful that the courts in the north will be able to convict the men.
Shortly before yesterday’s ruling, the lawyer representing four of the suspects, Mustafa Bulent Asena resigned from the case. No reason was given by his office for the resignation, but on Wednesday Asena warned he would withdraw from the case if his clients’ remand period was extended saying: “I am a lawyer and I don’t want to be a player in this comedy. If the chief prosecutor insists on keeping my clients in custody, I will exercise my rights as a lawyer and not attend the hearing.”
Although Asena did not represent his former clients yesterday, he attended the hearing. The suspects have been appointed a new lawyer, Kemal Aktay, who repeated Asena’s belief that the suspects should be released due to the absence of evidence against them – something he judge refused to do.
Judge Peri Hakki justified the five’s further detention saying the north’s police needed more time to investigate the triple murder that rocked the island twelve days ago.
The request for more time came from police chief inspector Hasan Esenboga, who told the court investigations were ongoing and that so far 18 people had been interviewed. He said also that police were still seeking the murder weapon and an Alpha Romeo car believed to have been involved in the murder. Search warrants have also been issued for two more suspects still at large, he said.
Esenboga also told the court that Interpol officials from Turkey had been in touch with the north’s authorities suggesting the suspects be extradited via Turkey to south Cyprus.
“We wrote back saying our laws do not allow it,” Esenboga said.
Esenboga was repeating the words of Turkish Cypriot ‘attorney general’ Akin Sait, who said on Wednesday that sending the suspects to the south would be “unconstitutional” and that the Republic should work with the north on conducting the trail against the five.
“No country would hand its citizen to another country to be tried,” he said adding: “This is international law and it has to be accepted as such.
“With the doors between the two communities open there will be many occasions when we will need to work together. There is no alternative but to co-operate,” Sait added.
He warned again that if the Greek Cypriot police insisted on not releasing evidence against the suspects, the north’s authorities might be forced to release them.
“We will go over the evidence and decide whether there is a case against the suspects. If there isn’t, they will be set free. If that happens it will be up to them where they go.”
He added that the north had sent a message via the UN appealing for help from the south, but that the response from the Greek Cypriots had been negative, prompting him to accuse the Greek Cypriot police of having “secret motives” for not providing the Turkish Cypriot court with evidence about the murder.
Sait recalled a case from 1997 in which a Turkish Cypriot wanted for a murder committed in Britain was tried in the north and sentenced to 14 years in jail. The British judiciary accepted the ruling, he said.
“This did not constitute recognition of the TRNC. It was simply one country co-operating with another in order that a criminal could be tried,” he added.