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Christian Slayings Probe Leads To 12 Arrests In Turkey

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  • Christian Slayings Probe Leads To 12 Arrests In Turkey

    CHRISTIAN SLAYINGS PROBE LEADS TO 12 ARRESTS IN TURKEY
    By Jennifer Riley

    Christian Post
    April 23 2007

    Twelve suspects have been detained by Turkish police as investigations
    continue into the slaying of three men last week in a Christian
    publishing house that distributes Bibles in Turkey.

    The girlfriend of one of the 11 suspects was arrested in Istanbul
    Saturday bringing the total number to 12 people believed to
    be connected to the killing of the three victims, reported The
    Associated Press.

    Last Wednesday, one German and two Turkish Christians were bound hand
    and legs before having their throats slit in the southeastern city
    of Malatya.

    The town of Malatya is the hotbed of Turkish nationalism and is the
    hometown of Mehmet Ali Agca, the gunman who tried to assassinate Pope
    John Paul II in 1981.

    Two of the victims, Necati Aydin, 36, and Tilmann Geske, 46, were
    already dead upon police arrival. The third, Ugur Yuksel, 32, died
    in the hospital due to profuse blood lost.

    Aydin and Yuksel were both Muslim converts to Christianity making them
    the first known martyrdom of Turkish converts from Islam since the
    founding of the Turkish Republic in 1923, according to persecution
    watchdog Compass Direct News.

    The Zirve Publishing House general manager said his employees had
    recently received threats but he could not identify who made them,
    according to CNN-Turk television. Furthermore, Dogan news agency
    reported, the publishing house was the target of previous protests
    by nationalists who accuse it of proselytizing.

    Some of the suspects told investigators that they killed the Christian
    men to protect Islam.

    "We didn't do this for ourselves, but for our religion," Turkish
    newspaper Hurriyet quoted a suspect as saying, according to AP. "Our
    religion is being destroyed. Let this be a lesson to enemies of
    our religion."

    The deaths of the three Christian men were the latest in politically
    secular Turkey where over 99 percent of 71 million citizens are Muslim.

    Last year, Turkish youths killed an Italian Roman Catholic priest
    while he prayed in a church in Trabzon, and earlier this year a gunman
    killed prominent Armenian Christian editor Hrant Dink in Istanbul.

    All of last week's victims worked in Zirve Publishing House and
    attended the same local 30-member Kurtulus Protestant Church pastored
    by victim Aydin, according Compass Direct News.

    Aydin and Geske were each married and had two children while Yuksel
    was engaged to be married within a few months, according to Compass.

    Last Friday, the World Evangelical Alliance sent Johan Candelin of
    Finland to Turkey as its representative to provide spiritual support
    to the families of the three deceased.

    "We condemn this act of violence against Turkish Christians. We must
    find a way of resolving conflict without resorting to these kinds of
    brutal acts," said Geoff Tunnicliffe, international director of the
    WEA, in a statement last week.

    The WEA is composed of 127 national evangelical alliances and
    represents 420 million evangelical Christians worldwide.

    "It is incumbent upon government, community and faith leaders to
    help create a climate of mutual respect that builds understanding
    and reconciliation," declared Tunnicliffe. "Today, we grieve for the
    loss of our brothers and we stand in solidarity, prayer and support
    for Christians in Turkey."
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