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  • Edgy Turkish Authors Under Guard After Dink Killing

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Feb 1 2007

    Edgy Turkish Authors Under Guard After Dink Killing


    By Emma Ross-Thomas, Reuters

    Fear has engulfed Turkey's intelligentsia since the murder of
    Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink. Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk has
    cancelled a book tour and more than a dozen other writers have been
    assigned bodyguards.

    Attacks against writers in Turkey are not new. More than 50
    journalists have been killed since the 1970s but Dink was the first
    since 1999, the year Turkey became a candidate to join the European
    Union and embarked on major human rights reforms.

    "There's deep disappointment among intellectuals, that we're back to
    square one," said leftist columnist Cengiz Candar who had a bodyguard
    for 10 years but no longer. "There's an uneasiness... Your lifestyle
    changes when you have a bodyguard," he told Reuters.

    Dink was shot outside his newspaper office in Istanbul last month by
    a teenager apparently inspired by ultra- nationalist ideas. He had
    angered nationalists with his writings on the mass killing of
    Armenians in Turkey in 1915. One of seven men charged in the case
    warned Pamuk to watch out as he was hauled into court. Pamuk has now
    called off a planned trip to Germany. Like Dink, Pamuk has faced
    trial for his views on the Armenian issue.

    Though Turkey is much more politically stable than in the volatile
    1970s or 1990s, writers and activists fear a rising tide of
    nationalism ahead of presidential and general elections this year
    that is partly fuelled by disillusion with the EU. They want the
    government to scrap a controversial law that makes it a crime to
    insult Turkish identity. Article 301 has been used against Pamuk,
    Dink and many others.

    The writers say the law makes them a target for nationalist violence,
    even though few are ever convicted under it. Some, like Dink, say
    they have received death threats from ultra-nationalist websites.

    An official at the Istanbul governor's office said 18 people have
    been given bodyguards since Dink's death. Sara Whyatt, a program
    director at PEN, the global association that fights for writers'
    interests, says what makes Turkey particularly unusual is the number
    of fiction writers who are targeted.

    Novelist Elif Shafak faced trial under article 301 for comments on
    Armenians and Turks made by one of her fictional characters. Both
    Shafak and Pamuk have bodyguards.

    Turkey's government strongly condemned Dink's murder and vowed to
    bring the culprits to justice. But it has resisted calls, including
    from the EU, to scrap 301 and said insulting national identity is a
    crime in other European countries too. This attitude risks
    emboldening militant nationalists ready to use violence against
    perceived enemies, analysts say.

    "There is a congenial atmosphere that condones and exalts their
    actions. They believe they are doing something positive for their
    country," said Ankara University's Dogu Ergil.

    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has said the government may amend the
    article but is very reluctant to abolish it.

    "Because of the election, the government is not acting as vigorously
    as expected. Erdogan ... is backtracking on 301. We feel his heart is
    not in it," said leading Turkish commentator Mehmet Ali Birand, who
    also has a bodyguard. "The tension will increase until the
    presidential election, then the mood will change," he predicted.

    Turkey's parliament elects a new president in May.
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