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Was Turkey Behind The Kidnapping Of An Assyrian Monk?

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  • Was Turkey Behind The Kidnapping Of An Assyrian Monk?

    WAS TURKEY BEHIND THE KIDNAPPING OF AN ASSYRIAN MONK?

    Assyrian International News Agency AINA
    Dec 13 2007

    Stockholm -- Father Daniel Savci was kidnapped on November 28, 2007
    at 14:00 on his way to his monastery in the village of Baristepe, in
    Turabdin, south east Turkey. Two cars were involved. The kidnapping
    took place when the Turkish military was on its highest alert in the
    region, with check points on roads in the entire area because of a
    subsequent military operation against the Kurdistan Workers Party
    (PKK) guerillas in north Iraq.

    It became evident early on that forces within the Turkish state were
    behind the kidnapping. The monk was transported by the kidnappers to
    a place in the town of Batman, 90 kilometers north of his village,
    despite all the check points set up by the military.

    The Turkish daily Hurriet quickly reported online that the monk had
    been kidnapped by the PKK, only to retract the story 30 minutes later
    and state that the kidnapping was by "unknown perpetrators."

    The next day the Turkish command officers were unusually relaxed in
    their contacts with Assyrian representatives and guaranteed that the
    monk would be found unharmed. It became clear that the military could
    influence how the kidnapping would develop and resolve. On the same
    day, the governor in the county of Mardin told the newspaper Milliyet
    "the state will arrest the perpetrators soon and this will be a happy
    news without any injuries to Daniel Savci".

    Shortly after the release of the monk, the same governor told Milliyet,
    on November 30, that he had called Prime Minister Erdogan to tell him
    about the release, but because of circumstances concerning "the safety
    of the state" he could not reveal the identity of the kidnappers.

    Since then it has been revealed that one of the kidnappers was a
    village guard. The village guards are a militia, equipped and backed
    by the state to fight against the PKK. The militias stand therefore
    under the control of the Turkish state. Village guard Halil Esen
    was detained on 4 December together with the other kidnappers; all
    are awaiting indictment. It is highly unlikely that this village
    guard committed this act without the knowledge and sanction of his
    superiors. It has been suggested the plan was to kill the Assyrian
    monk and blame the PKK, hence providing a pretext for military action.

    Without a thorough investigation by the Turkish government, and so
    long as the Swedish government and the EU do not pressure Turkey to
    investigate, the incident will be swept under the rug and similar
    things will happen again.

    The murder of Armenian journalist Hrant Dink took place with the
    approval and knowledge of influential police officers, military
    personnel and politicians; so, too, for the murder of three
    missionaries in the city of Malatya. The Turkish state has so far
    done everything to cover up these murders.

    This is an outright violation of the resolution of the EU parliament
    from 2005. In point 14 the resolution states: "The European parliament
    encourages the commission to halt the membership negotiations with
    Turkey if principles of freedom, democracy, respect for the human
    rights, rights of minorities and the principles a state governed by
    law are violated against in a continuous and serious manner, as is
    agreed upon in the EU charter."

    It is time for the EU to show integrity and follow its own resolution
    and halt all economic aid to Turkey.
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