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Turkey Denounces Grisly Murders

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  • Turkey Denounces Grisly Murders

    TURKEY DENOUNCES GRISLY MURDERS

    Gulf Times, Qatar
    April 20 2007

    MALATYA, Turkey: Turkey condemned yesterday the gruesome murder
    of three people at a Christian publishing house, as church leaders
    warned of a "witch hunt" against their tiny minority in this largely
    Muslim nation.

    Police detained 10 people over Wednesday's attack in this conservative
    eastern city in which three people, among them a German, were tied
    to chairs and had their throats slit.

    "This is an attack against Turkey's stability, peace and tradition
    of tolerance," Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said in Ankara, as he
    voiced concern for the country's image abroad.

    "There have been similar attacks in the past... we will certainly
    take stricter measures," he added.

    Turkey is under pressure to guarantee the protection and freedom of
    non-Muslim minorities as part of its efforts to join the European
    Union.

    The Zivre (Summit) publishing house, which distributes bibles and
    publishes Christian literature, had previously been the target of
    protests by nationalists, media reports said.

    In remarks to the Italian daily La Stampa, the papal envoy to Turkey
    linked the killings to upcoming presidential elections, noting the
    "presence of well-known fanatical, ultra-nationalist groups".

    "Events like this have already happened during electoral campaigns,"
    Monsignor Antonio Lucibello said.

    Pope Benedict XVI made a landmark visit to Turkey in November - his
    first to a Muslim country - during which he stressed that respect
    for religious freedom must be a criterion for EU membership.

    Ambassadors from the 27 EU member countries met in Istanbul yesterday,
    after which the envoy from Germany, which currently holds the
    rotating EU presidency urged Ankara to take measures to protect
    religious freedoms.

    "We see the murders as an attack not only against individuals,
    but also against the principles of freedom and tolerance," German
    Ambassador Eckhart Cuntz said.

    Turkish newspapers said all those arrested at the scene were carrying
    copies of a letter that read: "We did it for our country. They are
    trying to take our country away, take our religion away."

    Protestant leaders here spoke of a growing intolerance towards
    Christians, which they said was being fuelled by politicians and
    the media.

    "Today in Turkey, there is a missionary hunt, just like the witch
    hunts of medieval times," Ihsan Ozbek, a leader of the Alliance of
    Protestant Churches in Turkey, said.

    "Turkey is facing dangers and threats unprecedented in its history.

    The fact is that Turkey has become a place of unprecedented intolerance
    and rejection," he said.

    The dead were identified as German Tilman Geske and Turkish nationals
    Ugur Yuksel and Necati Aydin, the pastor of Malatya's 30-strong
    Protestant community.

    Proselytising is not banned but generally viewed with suspicion
    in Turkey, whose population is 99% Muslim; small Greek Othodox,
    Catholic, Armenian and Jewish communities are concentrated mainly in
    Istanbul.
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