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Turkish City Grapples With Nationalist Violence After Murders

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  • Turkish City Grapples With Nationalist Violence After Murders

    TURKISH CITY GRAPPLES WITH NATIONALIST VIOLENCE AFTER MURDERS
    by Nicolas Cheviron

    Agence France Presse -- English
    February 8, 2007 Thursday 11:16 AM GMT

    The Black Sea port of Trabzon is searching its historic soul after
    after two murders blamed on ultra-nationalists, that have rattled
    Turkey and raised political tensions.

    A 16-year-old boy was jailed last year for shooting an Italian priest
    as he knelt in prayer in the city's Santa Maria Catholic Church. The
    murder was widely linked to the publication of cartoons of the Prophet
    Mohammed in Europe.

    The January 19 killing of ethnic-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink,
    whose alleged 17-year-old assailant and seven accomplices all come
    from Trabzon has heightened anxieties.

    On top of the murders there was the bombing in 2004 of a McDonald's
    restaurant and the near lynching of five leftist activists mistaken
    for Kurdish militants.

    The city's lively commercial streets and stone buildings are reminders
    of the past glories of what was once Trebizond, a booming Silk Road
    trading city, far from any thoughts of nationalist-fuelled violence.

    With a sizeable university, an ever-popular football club and a flow of
    tourists from Russia and Caucasus countries, the city of 300,000 people
    displays no signs to brand it a place isolated in misery and ignorance.

    Pelitli is an impoverished suburb where Dink's alleged murderer, Ogun
    Samast, a jobless high-school dropout, met with friends in Internet
    cafes to discuss what they saw as rising threats to Turkey's unity.

    Mayor Omer Kayikci was at pains to explain what drove the youths
    to violence.

    "Of course, there is unemployment, but this has never before caused
    trouble in the streets or led to the formation of gangs," he said.

    Some intellectuals and officials who gathered here last week to discuss
    why Trabzon is producing violence suggested that the city reflected
    rising nationalism across Turkey, fuelled by what is perceived as
    humiliations by the European Union and US designs to subdue the
    Muslim world.

    Dink was hated by nationalists for branding as genocide the mass
    killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire. It is one of the
    most controversial episodes in Turkish history and the EU has urged
    an open debate.

    Suleyman Gunduz, an MP from the ruling Justice and Development Party,
    drew attention to the fact that Trabzon was the city that lost the
    largest number of soldiers to a two-decade Kurdish insurgency in
    the southeast.

    Local people, he added, are also wary of a possible campaign to revive
    what was the ancient Greek Kingdom of Pontus in their region.

    The violence can also be blamed on mafia-style groups involved in
    drug-trafficking and prostitution in the city who "are hiding behind
    the banner of nationalism," lawyer Omer Faruk Altuntas said.

    But human rights activist Gultekin Yucesan said the real problem lies
    with "gangs within the state who are responsible for Dink's murder."

    The "deep state" is a term used to describe members of the
    establishment, mostly the security forces, who are prepared to act
    outside the law to eliminate what they see as threats to Turkey's
    unity.

    Dink's killing gave ammunition to those who believe the "deep state"
    exists, after a video emerged showing policemen posing for pictures
    with the assailant after his capture in the northern city of Samsun.

    The media said the pictures were a show of support for the murder.

    The Istanbul's intelligence chief was dismissed Monday following
    accusations that the police failed to follow up on a tip-off last
    year about a plot to kill Dink being organised in Trabzon.

    In the Santa Maria Church, the members of a small Roman Catholic
    congregation that held a memorial service Monday for the slain priest,
    Father Andrea Santoro, were reluctant to join the debate.

    Underscoring their sense of anxiety, a worshipper pointed at the tall
    walls surrounding the 19th-century building: "This is not a church,
    it is a fortress," he said. "People are tough here."
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