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Nationalism Suspected In 3 Deaths In Turkey

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  • Nationalism Suspected In 3 Deaths In Turkey

    NATIONALISM SUSPECTED IN 3 DEATHS IN TURKEY
    By Sabrina Tavernise

    International Herald Tribune, France
    April 18 2007

    ISTANBUL: Three people were found with their throats slit in a
    publishing house in eastern Turkey that had printed Bibles and other
    Christian literature, the authorities said Wednesday. One of the
    victims was a German citizen.

    The authorities detained five men for questioning, three 19-year-olds
    and two 20-year-olds, but did not publicly identify them. However,
    the publishing house in Malatya, a town with a nationalist reputation,
    has had trouble in the past over a shipment of printed Bibles, and
    it seemed likely that the attackers had a nationalist agenda.

    Change is opening up Turkish society, and a nationalist fringe -
    xenophobes for whom the ethnic and religious purity of the Turkish
    state is worth killing for - have been using violence against its
    proponents more often in recent months.

    Hrant Dink, a Turkish journalist of Armenian descent killed this
    winter was one of the victims. A Roman Catholic priest killed last
    year was another.

    The trend is worrying for the government, whose prime minister,
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has been pushing hard for Turkey to gain entry
    to the European Union.

    Some European politicians have opposed Turkey's membership arguing
    that Turkey does not fit culturally or religiously, and the killings
    of Christians, though rare, do not help Turkey's case.

    The victims were found seated in chairs, their hands and feet bound,
    said Halil Ibrahim Dasoz, a government official in Malatya in comments
    on Turkish NTV television. One died later from his wounds.

    He had also been stabbed in the back and stomach.

    The state-run Anatolian agency identified the victims as Tilman
    Ekkehart Geske, 46; Necati Aydin, 35; and Ugur Yuksel, whose age was
    not given. The German ambassador, Eckart Cuntz, confirmed through a
    spokesman that one of the victims was a German citizen. He declined
    to give further details.

    Reuters quoted Carlos Madrigal, an evangelical pastor in Istanbul,
    saying that he knew the victims and that they were evangelical
    Protestants.

    The killings took place in the building where the publishing house
    was based, the Turkish interior minister, Abdulkadir Aksu, said at
    a news conference on national television.

    The five suspects were apprehended quickly, because a police station
    was located close by, Aksu said. Several of the young men were carrying
    weapons. Another, who had broken his leg in a jump from a window,
    was also detained. NTV television broadcast footage of authorities
    rushing four young men down the stairwell of a building.

    The recent nationalist attacks are ghosts from Turkey's past. Malatya
    once had a heavy Armenian population, but lost it in the bloody
    founding of the Turkish state, which was trying to scrub the nation
    free of minority identity to build a new Turkey.

    It encouraged nationalists to resettle in the area in an effort to
    preserve Turkish identity there.

    "Nationalism is on the rise in Turkey," said Ali Bulac, a Turkish
    newspaper columnist in Istanbul. "It stands against the U.S. and
    the EU."

    The Anatolian news agency reported that the young men had been
    staying at a youth hostel in town, preparing for university entrance
    exams. One had been thrown out for getting into a fight. It also
    reported that they had checked out of the hostel recently and that
    a note incriminating them in the killing was found on one of them.

    The publishing house had changed its name after having trouble with
    nationalist groups that had forcefully blocked a shipment of bibles,
    Meftun Kilinc, a reporter for ERTV, a television station in Malatya,
    said in a telephone interview. She said the new name was Zirve
    Publishing.

    Turkish nationalists tout their Muslim identity, but often have more
    in common with hard-line secularists of the state elite than with
    Islamists. The distinction is important because of the broad debate
    now roiling Turkish society over the role of religion and its proper
    relation to the state. That disagreement has come sharply into focus
    in recent weeks as the country faces an election to its presidency,
    the post safeguarding secularism.

    Erdogan, whose political background is Islamic, may try to compete
    for it, a possibility that has hard-line secularists worried.

    Sebnem Arsu contributed reporting.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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