Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Three Slayings Jar Turkish Christians

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Three Slayings Jar Turkish Christians

    THREE SLAYINGS JAR TURKISH CHRISTIANS
    By Laura King

    Seattle Times, WA
    Los Angeles Times
    Nurhan Karaduman / Ihlas News Agency/AP
    April 19 2007

    Turkish police officers detain a suspect Wednesday after a fatal
    attack at a Christian publishing house in Malatya, Turkey.

    ISTANBUL, Turkey - In a gruesome attack that sent shockwaves through
    Turkey's tiny Christian community, assailants Wednesday slit the
    throats of three men at a publishing house that distributes Bibles
    and other Christian literature.

    Five youths were detained at the scene in the conservative eastern
    city of Malatya, Turkish authorities said. One news report said the
    alleged attackers carried notes indicating their motive was right-wing
    nationalism.

    Turkey's sometimes hostile stance toward its religious and ethnic
    minorities has been a persistent source of concern to Western
    governments as the country presses ahead with its campaign for entry
    into the European Union.

    While the government officially preaches tolerance, it historically
    has failed to rein in virulent ultranationalist groups. Authorities
    were accused of ignoring repeated death threats against Hrant Dink,
    an ethnic Armenian newspaper editor who was gunned down outside his
    offices in Istanbul in January. Prosecutors later said a teenager
    confessed to the shooting.

    At the Zirve publishing house in Malatya's city center, police
    discovered the three victims bound hand and foot, tied to chairs
    with their throats cut. Two already were dead; the third died at
    the hospital.

    All were believed to have been workers at the publishing house. One
    of the dead men had German citizenship, the German Embassy confirmed.

    Christians make up less than 1 percent of the population of 70 million
    in this officially secular but overwhelmingly Muslim country.

    However, they are regarded with deep suspicion, particularly if they
    are seen to be involved in proselytizing.

    Malatya has long been considered a stronghold of Turkish nationalism,
    laced with anti-Christian sentiment. Mehmet Ali Agca, who tried to
    assassinate Pope John Paul II in 1981, was from the city.

    One of the five youths in custody suffered serious head injuries when
    he jumped from a third-story window as police arrived. They were
    summoned by visitors who were worried when they received no answer
    to their knocks.

    Police said the other four young men, who were found standing over
    the blood-soaked victims, were being questioned, but authorities
    declined to comment.

    One Turkish television station, Channel D, said in a report from
    Malatya that each youth had carried an identical note declaring:
    "We did this for our country. ... They are attacking our religion."

    The Zirve publishing house, whose name means "Summit," previously had
    been the target of ultranationalist protests and threats. Turkish
    television showed footage of a demonstration in Malatya in 2005,
    in which marchers chanted slogans denouncing Christian evangelism.

    "There has been a mood against Christian missionaries for a long time,
    despite the tradition of tolerance in the old Ottoman Empire," said
    Mustafa Akyol, a Turkish columnist and analyst. "Turkey is becoming
    an insecure place for minorities in general."
Working...
X