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Turkey Detains 5 More In Christian Missionary Slaying

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  • Turkey Detains 5 More In Christian Missionary Slaying

    TURKEY DETAINS 5 MORE IN CHRISTIAN MISSIONARY SLAYING
    By Amberin Zaman

    Voice of America
    April 19 2007

    Police in Turkey have detained five more suspects in connection with
    an attack against a Christian publishing house in the conservative
    eastern city of Malatya. Three employees were killed Wednesday by
    knife-wielding assailants, who reportedly said they were acting to
    protect Islam. From Istanbul, Amberin Zaman reports for the VOA.

    Malatya Governor Halil Ibrahim Dasoz, 19 Apr 2007 Governor Halil
    Ibrahim Dasoz says police have arrested five more suspects, doubling
    the number of people detained in connection with the attack on the
    Zirve publishing house. The publisher distributes bibles and publishes
    Christian material.

    Dasoz told reporters that no links have been established between
    the alleged killers and illegal Islamic groups. The three victims,
    two Turkish citizens who were converts to Christianity and a German
    Protestant, were found bound to chairs with their throats slit.

    Turkish police officers detain a suspect following attack on a
    publishing house in Malatya, southeastern Turkey, 18 Apr 2007 Turkish
    media said the suspects were mainly students who lived at a hostel
    run by an Islamic foundation.

    Wednesday's killings drew sharp protests from EU governments that
    have long criticized Turkey over discrimination against non-Muslim
    and non-Turkish minorities.

    Last year, an Italian Catholic priest was shot dead by an
    ultra-nationalist teenager in the Black Sea city of Trabzon. In
    January, an ethnic-Armenian news editor, Hrant Dink, was gunned down
    by a teenager in Istanbul, raising fears of a concerted campaign
    against the country's tiny Christian community.

    The Chairman of Turkey's Protestant Churches' Union, Bedri Peker,
    told a news conference anti-Christian sentiment has been fostered by
    Turkey's nationalist education system and encouraged by politicians
    and the media.

    Peker added that Turkey's Christians have the right to worship freely
    and spread their faith through peaceful means, but they are regarded
    as what he called "spies and enemies of the state."

    Ihsan Ozbek, the pastor of the Ankara-based Kurtulus Church that has
    received many anonymous threats, told VOA in a telephone interview
    that he blames the murders on a climate of intolerance towards
    Christians. He added that no government official outside Malatya has
    contacted church officials to offer condolences.

    Turkey's government, led by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a
    former Islamist, has expressed concern over the spread of Christian
    missionary activity in Turkey. Mehmet Aydin, minister of state in
    charge of religious affairs, has called missionaries "separatist
    and destructive."

    There are mounting worries among pro-secular Turks that Mr. Erdogan
    will make a bid for the presidency when the incumbent Ahmet Necdet
    Sezer steps down in May. Throughout his seven-year term, Mr Sezer,
    a former judge, blocked government moves he viewed as a threat to
    the secular tenets laid down by the founder of modern Turkey, Mustafa
    Kemal Ataturk.

    Mr. Erdogan has not yet announced his intentions, but he has pledged
    to remain faithful to Ataturk's legacy.
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