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Turkey faces world jury after editor's killing

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  • Turkey faces world jury after editor's killing

    Washington Times, DC
    Feb 4 2006


    Turkey faces world jury after editor's killing

    WORLD BRIEFINGS
    By Andrew Borowiec
    THE WASHINGTON TIMES
    February 4, 2007


    NICOSIA, Cyprus -- The bullet that killed a Turkish-Armenian
    newspaper editor last month has put Turkey and its legal system
    before a world jury.
    Hrant Dink, editor of the Agos weekly, died because an unemployed
    17-year-old boy, Ogun Samast, claimed the editor had insulted
    "Turkishness," a concept that enshrines as sacrosanct the country's
    identity, state institutions and its army.
    Critics of the concept are treated as criminals under Article 301
    of Turkey's criminal code. Prominent writers, including Nobel Prize
    winner Orhan Pamuk, have been tried under the article.
    The young assassin apparently acted according to the principles
    of patriotism instilled in him and in millions of others. His victim
    was a critic of some of the acts protected by a system he judged to
    be unjust and was a member of the Armenian minority all but extinct
    in Turkey.
    Turkish liberals, international human rights organizations and
    European editorial writers demand a change in Article 301, which, if
    retained in its current form, is likely to keep Turkey out of the
    European Union. Turkey's EU membership negotiations are now stalled.
    EU entry at risk
    At Mr. Dink's funeral under the gray January sky of Istanbul,
    mourners carried placards denouncing the "301 Killer."
    In Strasbourg, France, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
    of Europe, an advisory body, formally asked for changes in Turkey's
    criminal code, saying it "judicially limits freedom of expression and
    validates legal and other attacks against journalists."
    Under the pressure of Mr. Dink's assassination, liberals hope for
    evolution in Turkish attitudes and laws, but rising nationalism
    across the country and the issues involved in parliamentary and
    presidential elections this year appear to preclude a change in the
    foreseeable future.
    The country has become steeped in chauvinism, with schoolchildren
    reciting one of the favorite slogans of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk,
    founder of the Turkish Republic: "Lucky is he who can say, 'I am a
    Turk,' " and troops on parade roar, "One Turk is worth the whole
    world."
    Although Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan promised to submit a
    review of Article 301 to parliament, his absence at the funeral that
    drew about 100,000 mourners was seen as less than encouraging.
    "Evidently, the prime minister is unwilling to lose nationalist
    votes," commented the daily Kathimerini in Athens.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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