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Turkish police posed for picture with killer of Armenian journalist

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  • Turkish police posed for picture with killer of Armenian journalist

    Turkish police posed for picture with killer of Armenian journalist
    By Peter Popham

    The Indpendent/UK
    Published: 03 February 2007

    Less than a fortnight after huge crowds thronged the streets of
    Istanbul at the funeral of the murdered Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink, chanting, "We are all Armenian," Turkey yesterday showed
    another, more sinister face.

    Turkish newspapers and television news programmes carried images of
    the man accused of shooting Mr Dink posing proudly behind a Turkish
    flag with police officers. In the background was a poster bearing the
    words of Mustafa Kemal Attaturk: "The nation's land is sacred. It
    cannot be left to fate."

    The video caused shock and consternation as commentators warned it was
    another sign of the growing power of Turkish ultra- nationalism as the
    nation gears up for parliamentary and presidential elections later
    this year.

    Ismet Berkan, editor of the liberal newspaper Radikal, said that the
    release of the video was like killing Mr Dink a second time. It
    proved, he claimed, "that the murderer and his associates are not
    alone, that their supporters ... have penetrated all segments of the
    state."

    Hrant Dink was the founder and editor of Agos, the weekly newspaper of
    Turkey's small and beleaguered Armenian population. Since launching
    the paper he had fought tirelessly to improve relations between Turkey
    and Armenia, which have been in deep freeze since the extermination of
    Armenia's large community in Anatolia between 1915 and 1917, the first
    genocide of the 20th century.

    Mr Dink told Turks to face the facts about the genocide, but his great
    goal was reconciliation. When France passed a law making denial of the
    Armenian genocide a criminal offence, for example, Mr Dink declared
    that he would go to France to deny it himself. He wrote that Armenians
    should "clear their blood of hatred for the Turks".

    Mangled in reiteration by Turkish nationalist websites, these words
    became "Turkish blood is dirty" - sparking 17-year-old Ogun Samast to
    travel to Istanbul from the Black Sea city of Trabzon and shoot Mr
    Dink outside his office. Seven others, all from Trabzon, have now
    been arrested for involvement.

    A police spokesperson said an investigation into the video footage and
    its leaking was under way.
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