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  • Cause For Concern In Turkey: Recent Attacks Aimed At Armenians, Or A

    CAUSE FOR CONCERN IN TURKEY: RECENT ATTACKS AIMED AT ARMENIANS, OR AT CHRISTIANS IN GENERAL?

    http://www.armenianow.com/society/42949/istanbul_attacks_armenian_genocide
    SOCIETY | 30.01.13 | 13:07

    By GAYANE ABRAHAMYAN
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Several assaults against Armenians in Turkey over the past month have
    raised concerns and stirred a wave of outrage not only among Armenians,
    but also Turkish human rights advocates, who held an act of protest
    Sunday calling for "consistency in investigating the assaults and
    murders on ethnic grounds".

    Pro-Kurdish member of the Turkish parliament, representative of Peace
    and Democracy party Sebahat Tuncel and independent MP, member of the
    Commission on Human Rights Ertugrul Kurkcu declared during the protest
    that the assaults were hate crimes motivated by strong anti-Armenian
    sentiments and that "the police is at fault for their inertness".

    On December 28, in her home at Istanbul's Samatia district largely
    populated by Armenians, 85-year-old Maritsa Kucuk was brutally
    murdered. Her son's testimony claims that the perpetrators had "carved"
    a cross with a knife on the old woman's chest.

    Some ten days earlier in the same district an 87-year-old native
    Armenian woman, Turfanda Ashik was assaulted and brutally beaten.

    On January 6 (Armenian Christmas), another native Armenian woman
    escaped an attempted assault on her way to church. With her own
    resistance and some support from aside she managed to find refuge in
    the church.

    On January 22, again at Samatia district, near his house 83-year-old
    Sultan Aykar became a victim of assault and lost vision in one eye
    caused by beating.

    Turkish human rights advocates are convinced that the crimes are of
    "racist anti-Armenian character", however it is unclear yet whether
    the "racist sentiments" are against Armenians only, or Christians
    in general.

    Editor of the Armenian version of Istanbul-based Agos daily Bagrat
    Estukian believes "these are hate crimes" as a reaction prior to the
    100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide to be marked in 2015.

    The Istanbul branch of Turkey's Human Rights Association has published
    a separate report in which several Samatia residents stress that they
    are "afraid" and that for as long as "the word 'Armenian' is used as
    a swear word, such incidents will keep happening".

    By various census results there are 50,000-60,000 Armenians living
    in Turkey today, the majority of them in Istanbul; Armenians there
    have a patriarchy, 16 schools, more than 30 churches, 3 newspapers
    (one of them 100-years-old) and two hospitals.

    Despite the constant fear and atmosphere of ethnic discrimination,
    the Armenian community of Turkey keeps staying in what they call their
    "historic homeland".

    "Such problems have always existed, but the atmosphere of fear now
    is really tangible," Istanbul-based Heriknaz Avagian, initiator and
    principle of the special Armenian school for the children of illegal
    immigrants, told ArmeniaNow.

    The year of 2007 became a watershed in the lives of Istanbul-Armenians,
    when editor-in-chief of Agos daily Hrant Dink was assassinated near
    his newsroom.

    As Turkish Armenian Arus Yumul, sociology professor and head of chair
    at one of Istanbul's biggest universities (around 12,000 students),
    explains "Dink's murder awakened not only us Armenians, but also
    Turks, who started showing more interest in the dark pages of their
    history," however this "awakening of consciousness" has also had
    a counter-effect.

    Months after Dink's murder Istanbul's St Astvatsatsin (Holy Virgin)
    church suffered an armed attack when a gunman opened fire during
    liturgy, luckily with no casualties.

    In 2011, on April 24 - Remembrance Day for the victims of the Armenian
    Genocide - in the army a Turkish soldier shot dead his fellow private
    Sevag Sahin Balikci. On the day of the funeral his parents said it
    was an accident, but during the trial, the last hearing of which
    took place on January 25, they declared that "Sevak was murdered for
    being Armenian, that day one Armenian had to be killed, it had been
    decided so."

    During the same 2011 a taxi driver physically abused an Armenian woman:
    he called her an "infidel", beat her and threw out of his car.

    After this case the police stated that it was a matter of minutes
    to take the driver into custody, because both the vehicle number and
    the taxi service were known. More than a year has passed and nobody
    has been held accountable.

    These recent cases have had strong reaction in Armenia, some even
    drew parallels with the murder of Kurdish women in France during
    the same period, committed in the highlight of negotiations with
    Abdullah Ocalan.

    However, expert in Turkish studies Ruben Safrastyan, head of the
    Institute of Eastern Studies at the National Academy of Sciences,
    believes that the assaults are anti-Christian rather than
    anti-Armenian.

    "The Turkish society is undergoing a period of change, on the one hand
    it is the desire for growing awareness about the Genocide among some
    circles, on the other it is the extremist pro-religious, pro-Islamic
    sentiments growing deeper and as counter-effect the anti-Christian
    and anti-Armenian wave is getting bigger," says Safrastyan, adding
    that the government policy is creating fertile soil for all of this.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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