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A Turkish Murder Echoes Throughout The West

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  • A Turkish Murder Echoes Throughout The West

    A TURKISH MURDER ECHOES THROUGHOUT THE WEST

    Assyrian International News Agency, CA
    Feb 14 2007

    Fifty-three-year old Turkish-Armenian journalist, editor and columnist
    Hrant Dink was slain by gunfire in Istanbul on January 19, 2007. He
    was not only a courageous outspoken member of the Armenian minority
    in Turkey, he was husband to Rachel, who read aloud her letter to
    him at his funeral, and the father of several children.

    According to eyewitnesses, Dink was shot three times at point blank
    range in the back of his head by a young man who shouted, "I shot the
    unbeliever!" before he fled the scene. Reports are that the three-shot
    assassination style is that of the Turkish Hezbollah.

    How could a seventeen-year old teenager be so manipulated by
    nationalistic agitation as to commit a cold-blooded murder?

    Turkey has mourned the untimely death of Dink, editor of the
    Turkish-Armenian weekly journal Agos, and the loss of such an
    important voice for its political conscience. But how sincere was
    the public weeping for him? Before his death, he was treated by the
    media and politicians as a public enemy because of his comments about
    Turkish-Armenian relations and the massacres of Armenians during
    the First World War which he characterized as genocide. We cannot
    but suspect that for some Turkish politicians, the condemnation of
    Dink's assassination was motivated not by his death itself but by
    fear about the consequences of this atrocity for potential Turkish
    entry into the European Union.

    The murder reflected the toxic political atmosphere in Turkey. For
    a lot of journalists "paragraph 301" of the common law remains
    significant, in that it bans supposed insults to Turkish national
    identity. Even the Nobel Prize-winning Turkish author Orhan Pamuk
    was charged under this law, and Dink himself was prosecuted three
    times for insulting Turkishness. In fact, he received numerous death
    threats from Turkish nationalists who accused him of treason. Public
    prosecutor Kemal Kerincsiz must listen to the voices of those who
    blame his judicial career for the murder, since he charged Hrant
    Dink under the same law. Kerincisiz rejects any complicity in Dink's
    death and defends his action against Dink as well as this clause in
    the law which, in the present author's opinion, should be abolished
    for the sake of Turkish intellectual freedom.

    The killing of journalists has a dreadful history in Turkey. Abdi
    Ipekci and Ugur Mumcu were among the famous victims of aggression
    based on nationalist fantasies as well as religious intolerance. In
    fact, today, critics still live in great danger in Turkey. Sadly, the
    Turkish-Islamist construction of national identity diverts people from
    seeking the recovery of cultural and political pluralism in Turkey,
    a very great loss indeed.

    Many Turkish people paid their last respects to the Turkish-Armenian
    journalist who always supported dialogue between Armenians and Turks
    and who refused to leave Turkey even though he received threats. The
    slogans "We all are Hrant Dink" and "We all are Armenians" stand as
    evidence for Dink's high reputation as a prominent intellectual in
    Turkey. The impressive demonstrations express nothing less than the
    highest appreciation of Hrant Dink's commitment to freedom of opinion
    and democracy.

    Regrettably, however, Turkey must accept the reality that nationalist
    groups celebrated this unspeakable crime. They showed publicly that
    the nationalist image is more important to them than a human life.

    Acclaim for the murder of Hrant Dink showed that the Turkish propensity
    for extremism has changed, but that the bloody tradition persists. The
    nationalists saw Hrant Dink as a separatist, who risked the unity and
    alleged honor of the country. Important politicians like premiere Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan and President Ahmet Nedet Sezer were absent from the
    funeral. The political barriers were too high to be overcome. Other
    items on their agendas seemed more important for them. Erdogan thus
    indicated that the bullets which killed the 53-year old journalist
    and publisher were aimed at all Turkish citizens.

    Conspiracy theorists in Turkey very quickly argued that foreign
    influences are inflicting political harm on the country. Still,
    the people ask: why do dissidents fear for their lives?

    How could a seventeen-year old teenager be so manipulated by
    nationalistic agitation as to commit a cold-blooded murder? After his
    arrest he said that Dink described Turkish blood as unclean, and had
    to pay for it. The assassin came from the margins of the nationalist
    milieu, where teenagers are misused and dissidents are attacked.

    Other suspects were also arrested, as well they should be; there
    is certainly more behind the murder of Dink than a simple act by an
    enraged teenager.

    The claim that the crime was not political, which Turkish politicians
    want people to accept, has no ring of truth. The young assassin is a
    child of this nationalistic rhetoric that describes Turks as honest,
    hard-working and accomplished. But proof of such an identity cannot
    be found in Turkish society, or in its bloody history, even after
    the formation of the republic.

    What this will mean for Turkey's acceptance into the European Union
    remains to be seen; but the shots fired into Hrant Dink's head were
    certainly heard throughout the West.

    By Ali Sirin Source www.FamilySecurityMatters.org

    FamilySecurityMatte rs.org Contributing Editor Ali Sirin is a German
    journalist in the Alevi Muslim community. This text was translated by
    Hasan Canoglu and is distributed by the Center for Islamic Pluralism
    in Washington and London

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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