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Turkish woman detained over Christian murders

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  • Turkish woman detained over Christian murders

    Turkish woman detained over Christian murders

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 20, 2007 Friday

    Police have detained the girlfriend of the alleged leader of the
    assailants who brutally killed three Protestants in eastern Turkey,
    bringing the number of people in custody to 12, officials said
    Saturday.

    She is the girlfriend of Emre Gunaydin, 19, who remains in hospital
    after jumping from the third-storey office of a Christian publishing
    house in Malatya, where two Turks and a German were slain Wednesday,
    Governor Halil Ibrahim Dasoz said in televised remarks.

    The three victims, who belonged to the tiny Protestant community in
    Malatya, were killed by knife-wielding assailants who tied the men
    to chairs and tortured them before cutting their throats.

    Four suspects were captured at the crime scene when police raided the
    publishing house office, alerted by a member of the local Protestant
    community who grew suspicious when he found the office door locked.

    Gunaydin, who allegedly led the gang, jumped from the window in
    an apparent bid to escape arrest and was hospitalised with serious
    head injury.

    He had reportedly made several visits beforehand to the publishing
    house to gain the confidence of the people working there.

    Doctors said Saturday his condition was improving and he might be
    fit for questioning next week.

    "We attempted to wake him up today, but he woke up a bit
    aggressively... We will try again tomorrow (Sunday) or the following
    day," Sezai Yilmaz, the head of the hospital treating the man, told
    Anatolia news agency.

    Officials have not revealed the details of the remaining six suspects,
    who were detained Thursday and Friday, saying only that everyone in
    custody is aged 19 and 20.

    One of them, who was detained in Istanbul, was also brought to Malatya
    for questioning, the governor said.

    According to media reports, the killers are believed to be members of
    a cell of nationalist-Islamist fanatics similar to one in the northern
    city of Trabzon blamed for the January murder of Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink.

    Before killing the victims, the assailants reportedly tortured them for
    three hours as they interrogated them on their missionary activities.

    The Zirve publishing house distributed Bibles and published Christian
    literature.

    Proselytizing is not banned in Muslim, secular Turkey, but is generally
    viewed with suspicion.

    Prosecutors are looking into whether there was an illegal organisation
    or a mastermind behind the attack.

    The murders were the latest attack on non-Muslim minorities in Turkey
    following Dink's killing and the shooting of Italian Roman Catholic
    priest Andrea Santoro in Trabzon in February 2006.

    They were strongly condemned by the international community. Germany,
    which holds the rotating presidency of the European Union which
    Turkey is seeking to join, has urged Ankara to take measures to
    protect religious freedom.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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