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Turkish Prosecutor Wants 11 Jailed Over Christian Murders

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  • Turkish Prosecutor Wants 11 Jailed Over Christian Murders

    TURKISH PROSECUTOR WANTS 11 JAILED OVER CHRISTIAN MURDERS

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 22, 2007 Sunday

    A Turkish prosecutor called on Sunday for 11 suspects to be jailed
    pending trial over the gruesome murder of three Christians in eastern
    Turkey, the Anatolia news agency reported.

    The prosecutor made the demand after questioning the suspects --
    10 young men and a woman -- for about eight hours in Malatya city,
    where a German and two Turkish converts to Christianity had their
    throats slit Wednesday.

    A judge was due to make a ruling later on Sunday.

    A 12th suspect, allegedly the leader, remains in hospital with a
    serious head injury after jumping from the third-floor office of the
    Christian publishing house in Malatya where the victims were killed,
    to escape arrest.

    Doctors say the condition of the suspect -- named in the press as
    Emre Gunaydin, 19 -- is improving and he may be fit for questioning
    within several days.

    The murders were the latest attack on minorities in Turkey following
    the killings of a Roman Catholic priest last year and an ethnic
    Armenian journalist in January.

    The media have speculated that the assailants belong to a nationalist
    Islamist cell similar to one in the northern city of Trabzon blamed
    for the murder of ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

    Police brought the suspects to the courthouse in armoured vehicles
    and stepped up security in the area, Anatolia said.

    One of the suspects allegedly filmed the murders on his mobile
    telephone.

    He told the police he was asked to record the grisly scenes by
    Gunaydin, the mass-selling Sabah daily said.

    The three victims, who belonged to the tiny Protestant community
    in Malatya, were tied to chairs and tortured for three hours before
    being killed as their assailants interrogated them on their missionary
    activities.

    The Zirve publishing house distributed bibles and published Christian
    literature.

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

    Gunaydin had reportedly visited the publishing house several times
    and even attended an Easter dinner hosted by the community in Malatya
    this month.

    The sole woman suspect, detained Saturday, has been identified as
    his girlfriend.

    Officials have not revealed the details of the remaining six men,
    who were detained Thursday and Friday, saying only that all suspects
    are aged 19 and 20.

    Newspapers said one of them was the son of the mayor of a nearby town
    from the ruling Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party.

    The police are looking for seven other people, including a bearded
    man believed to have fled the publishing house shortly before police
    arrived, newspapers said.

    Germany, which holds the rotating presidency of the European Union
    that Turkey is seeking to join, has urged Ankara to take measures to
    ensure the protection of religious freedom.

    The German victim, Tilmann Geske, was buried in Malatya, where he
    had lived since 2003.

    His wife Suzanna told the Vatan daily Sunday that she and her three
    children would continue to live there "until Jesus gives me a sign
    to go."
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