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Hrant Dink, another martyr for free speech

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  • Hrant Dink, another martyr for free speech

    Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania)
    August 17, 2007 Friday
    SOONER EDITION

    HRANT DINK, ANOTHER MARTYR FOR FREE SPEECH

    TONY NORMAN


    Last year, I was part of a contingent of journalism fellows who met
    with Hrant Dink in his cramped office at Agos, a Turkish-Armenian
    newspaper in Istanbul. When we said goodbye, we didn't know we were
    bidding farewell to a brave journalist who would be assassinated by a
    17-year-old Turkish nationalist.

    The Knight-Wallace Fellows from University of Michigan milled on the
    very same sidewalk that, almost a year later, was a crime scene.

    On Jan. 19, Ogun Samast, a high school dropout from a Black Sea
    fishing village, followed the outspoken commentator as he left his
    office. "I approached him from behind and shot him from one meter
    away," Mr. Samast reportedly said in a detailed confession that made
    no concession to remorse. After Friday prayer services, Mr. Samast
    considered it an act of devotion to his homeland to shoot Mr. Dink
    (pronounced "deenk"), a 53-year-old father of three.

    Ogun Samast's actions so mortified and shamed his devout Muslim
    family that his father allegedly provided the tip that led to his
    arrest days after the shooting.

    When Mr. Samast was cornered by the cops at a bus station the next
    day in a nearby seaside village, he was still carrying the gun
    allegedly used to kill Hrant Dink.

    Mr. Samast told interrogators that Mr. Dink's columns alleging
    Turkey's guilt in the genocide of thousands of Armenians in 1915
    infuriated him. After reading several of his articles online, Mr.
    Samast decided to kill the Turkish citizen of Armenian descent for
    "insulting Turkishness."

    After a three-month adjournment, the trial of Mr. Samast and 17 other
    conspirators will resume in October. Turkish prosecutors believe the
    gunman, who is more illiterate thug than political assassin, is the
    spear end of conspiracy orchestrated by ultra-nationalist Turks and
    sympathetic police officers. Only eight of 18 alleged conspirators
    are in custody.

    Many see the upcoming trial as a forum that will pit the rule of law
    in Turkey against the nation's pathological sense of patriotism and
    tribal nationalism.

    Complicating things is the fact that Mr. Dink had once been convicted
    by a Turkish court for "insulting Turkishness" for maintaining
    Turkey's guilt in the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians. He was given a suspended sentence instead of jail time.

    Several well-known Turkish intellectuals and authors -- including
    Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk and Elif Shafak, another
    writer we met with during our trip to Istanbul -- were tried for
    violating Article 301 of the Turkish penal code.

    Turkey's insistence that a narrow interpretation of the Armenian
    question be upheld could stall its admission into the European Union.
    Ironically, Mr. Dink angered Armenians by arguing that the Armenian
    question shouldn't stop Turkey from being admitted to the EU. He
    believed Turkey would benefit from exposure to other democracies.

    *

    At last week's National Association of Black Journalists convention
    in Las Vegas, presidential candidates Barack Obama and Hillary
    Clinton paid tribute to Chauncey Bailey, editor of the Oakland Post.
    He was slain earlier this month by a 19-year-old handyman at an
    Oakland bakery run by a Black Muslim sect. Mr. Bailey had been
    investigating a story about financial chicanery at Your Black Muslim
    Bakery

    During one tribute, my friend Birgit Rieck, the Knight-Wallace
    Fellows program administrator, asked if I had ever noticed the eerie
    parallels between the Dink and Bailey murders. They were hard to
    miss.

    Hrant Dink, an Armenian of the Eastern Orthodox faith was murdered by
    a man who claimed to be a follower of Allah but had very little
    compassion in his heart.

    Chauncey Bailey, a Roman Catholic, was murdered by a man who called
    himself a black Muslim.

    Uneducated teenage fanatics with specific grievances committed both
    murders. But a larger conspiracy orchestrated by others is believed
    to have put both into motion. An antagonism to press freedom and
    freedom of conscience fueled by religious passion is at the root of
    both assassinations.

    Two societies, one Western, the other Muslim -- and both secular --
    will ask their respective judicial systems to rule that the murder of
    reporters is unacceptable.

    Everyone has to understand that there are no infidels in the 21st
    century -- only dissidents.
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