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NEWS WATCH: Turkey Christians Anxious After Muslims Kill Three Belie

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  • NEWS WATCH: Turkey Christians Anxious After Muslims Kill Three Belie

    NEWS WATCH: TURKEY CHRISTIANS ANXIOUS AFTER MUSLIMS KILL THREE BELIEVERS
    By BosNewsLife News Center with BosNewsLife's Stefan J. Bos

    BosNewsLife, Hungary
    April 22 2007

    Turkish police officers detain a suspect following attack on a
    publishing house in Malatya, southeastern Turkey, 18 Apr 2007. Via VOA
    News ISTANBUL, TURKEY (BosNewsLife)-- Christians in Turkey on Sunday,
    April 22, remained anxious amid fears of more violence after police
    arrested suspected Muslim militants believed to be involved in killing
    three evangelical believers at a Christian publishing house.

    Police said they detained a dozen suspects linked to the slayings
    of a German man and two Turks, all former Muslims, who were found
    with their hands and legs tied and their throats slit at the Zirve
    publishing house in the town of Malatya Wednesday, April 18.

    The German man, identified as 45-year-old interpreter Tilman Ekkehart
    Geske, had been living in Malatya since 2003. Two other Turkish
    Christians, Necati Aydin, 35, and Ugur Yuksel ,32, - were also found
    tied up and their throats slit.

    Turkish media reports said the suspects were believed to be members
    of a cell of nationalist-Islamist extremists similar to one in
    the northern city of Trabzon blamed for the January murder of
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

    WOMAN DETAINED

    On Saturday, April 21, police detained a woman who was described as
    the girlfriend of one of the 11 suspects already in custody, Malatya
    Gov. Halil Dasoz told reporters.

    Media reports said one of the other suspects tried to escape from
    police by jumping from a fourth floor balcony at the scene of the
    killings on Wednesday, April 18. Hospital officials reportedly said
    he was in stable condition and was improving.

    The killings has added to concern within Turkey's tiny Christian
    community about its future amid growing nationalism and intolerance
    following Dink's killing and the shooting of Italian Roman Catholic
    priest Andrea Santoro in the town of Trabzon in February 2006..

    As new details emerged about the killings, Geske's wife Susanne Geske,
    said she did not harbor any thoughts of revenge, Evangelical news
    agency Idea reported. She said she had been living in Malatya for ten
    years and intends to stay there. Susanne Geske said she is hopeful
    that the aftermath of the murders will signal a new beginning for the
    relations between Christians and Muslims in Turkey. Many Muslims had
    shown their outrage about the murders and expressed their condolences
    to the bereaved.

    PROTESTANT CHURCHES

    In a statement monitored by BosNewsLife the Chairman of Turkey's
    Protestant Churches' Union, Bedri Peker said anti-Christian sentiment
    has been fostered by Turkey's nationalist education system and
    encouraged by politicians and the media. Peker reportedly 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
    reportedly received many anonymous threats, told the Voice Of America
    (VOA) network that the government appeared reluctant to tackle the
    violence against Christians. He said 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, VOA reported. Mehmet Aydin, minister
    of state in charge of religious affairs reportedly called missionaries
    "separatist and destructive."

    In published remarks, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, who as Vatican
    secretary of state is Pope Benedict XVI's top aide, called the attack
    "an insane act by a fanatic minority," and urged renewed dialogue.

    "We must not waste the fruits of the pope's visit to Turkey, which
    has really brought us closer," Bertone was quoted as saying by Italian
    news agency ANSA. But on Sunday, April 22, his words appeared wishful
    thinking.
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