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Landlord demands eviction as Turkish church is vandalised

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  • Landlord demands eviction as Turkish church is vandalised

    Inspire Magazine, UK
    Feb 4 2006


    Landlord demands eviction as Turkish church is vandalised


    Assailants on Turkey's Black Sea coast vandalised a Protestant
    church, days after nationalists from the region murdered a well-known
    Armenian journalist.

    Attackers shattered the Agape Protestant Church's windows and
    spray-painted its street sign on January 28 in the city of Samsun,
    Pastor Orhan Picaklar told Compass News Direct.

    Located in a region infamous for producing the nationalist killers of
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink and an Italian Catholic priest last
    year, the congregation has suffered a dozen stoning attacks and
    weekly e-mail threats during the past two years.

    `I was shocked, because, though we've been stoned before, it was
    never this big an attack,' Pastor Picaklar said. `When I arrived at 5
    am there were about 20 police on the premises, including Samsun's
    deputy police chief.'

    According to the pastor, about 30 heavy rocks had been thrown through
    church windows, some of them smashing interior windows and denting
    walls.

    He said a note was left inside the church but that police refused to
    show him what was written on it, claiming that it `wasn't important'.

    Samsun's police chief later refused to include the note in the
    official investigation, stating that it had `nothing to do with this
    case,' he added.

    The pastor said he had received two death threats by e-mail on the
    day of the attack, one signed by the Turkish Vengeance Brigade.

    `I will kill you Orhan, you have very little time left,' read one
    e-mail, which cursed the congregation as `Christian pigs' who would
    `burn in hell'.

    `I've received so many of these in the last three years that I don't
    even pay attention to them, I just delete them,' Pastor Picaklar told
    Compass. `But in recent days I've started to take them seriously.'

    The murder of Armenian writer and thinker Hrant Dink, gunned down by
    a young nationalist from the Black Sea city of Trabzon on January 19,
    has created concern over growing militant nationalism in Turkey.

    The event has also fuelled debate over the responsibility of the
    state to protect individuals targeted by violent elements in society.

    `After these events, both Dink's death and this church attack, the
    police are planning to provide us with security,' the pastor said.

    Sunday's attack has convinced the church's landlord that the
    congregation must leave. The church only moved into the building
    from its former location three weeks ago.

    `I think people don't want to work with us because of the
    rock-throwing attacks,' Pastor Picaklar said. `Where are we supposed
    to worship this winter, on the street?'
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