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Christian Bible Publishers Murdered In Turkey

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  • Christian Bible Publishers Murdered In Turkey

    CHRISTIAN BIBLE PUBLISHERS MURDERED IN TURKEY
    by Daniel Blake

    ChristianToday, UK
    April 19 2007

    Three Bible publishing house workers have been killed in the latest
    attack on Turkey's minority Christian community on Wednesday.

    Three Bible publishing house workers have been killed in the latest
    attack on Turkey's minority Christian community on Wednesday.

    Photo: Turkish police officers wrestle an unidentified man down
    following an attack at a publishing house in the south-eastern Turkish
    city of Malatya, April 18, 2007. Attackers slit the throats of three...

    (REUTERS/Ihlas News Agency)

    The attackers bound their victims before slitting their throats
    in the publishing house in Malatya, a city in central Turkey and a
    nationalist stronghold.

    Four people are believed to have been detained for questioning
    regarding the killings, and one other suspect that fell from the
    building was taken to the hospital with head trauma.

    It has emerged that one of those murdered was of German nationality,
    German Ambassador to Turkey Eckart Cuntz said.

    Images appeared on television stations showing police leading several
    young men out of the building where the killings took place.

    Political tensions are rising in the secular but largely Sunni Muslim
    country over the past year, with Armenian-Turkish editor Hrant Dink
    being shot dead by an ultranationalist youth earlier this year.

    Late last year the head of the Roman Catholic Church, Pope Benedict
    XVI, paid a short visit to Turkey to ease relations, but during the
    visit a number of protests broke out in Istanbul. There have been
    reports of an increase in violence against Christian clergy since
    the visit.

    Christian missionaries are routinely accused by Turkish nationalists
    of attempting to undermine Turkey's political and religious order.

    The EU has clamped down on hostilities towards Christian missionaries
    in Turkey, however, telling the country that the Christian minority
    must be given more religious freedom in order to reach the level of
    religious freedom acceptable for entry to the EU.

    Carlos Madrigal, an evangelical pastor in Turkey, told Reuters:
    "We would like a government campaign to get rid of the myths, such
    as that missionaries are trying to divide the country, these are the
    things which feed such acts.

    "In some ways the situation has improved because we have got
    legal rights ... but there are parts of society which have become
    radicalised."
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