Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Obituary: Hrant Dink

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Obituary: Hrant Dink

    Obituary: Hrant Dink


    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/ europe/6279907.stm


    Published: 2007/01/19 16:34:03 GMT


    Hrant Dink, a writer and journalist, was one of the most prominent voices of
    Turkey's shrinking Armenian community.
    The 53-year-old editor was convicted in 2005 for writing about the Armenian
    "genocide" in 1915, a claim denied by the authorities in Ankara.
    He had reportedly received threats from nationalists, who viewed him as a
    traitor, and had wanted to emigrate.
    Dink was one of dozens of writers to be charged under controversial laws
    against insulting "Turkishness".

    'Voice of Armenians'
    As the editor of bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, Dink was a
    well-known public figure in Turkey.
    His articles about the alleged mass killings of Armenians by Turks at the
    beginning of the 20th century had sparked huge controversy in the country on a
    number of occasions.
    In October 2005, Dink was given a six-month suspended sentence after a court
    had ruled that one of his pieces described Turkish blood as dirty. His appeal
    was rejected by a court last year.
    Dink had always denied his words meant any such thing, arguing that his
    column had been in fact aimed at improving the difficult relationship between
    Turks and Armenians.
    In one interview in 2005, he said he had been thinking of leaving Turkey.
    "I don't think I could live with an identity of having insulted them [Turks]
    in this country... if I am unable to come up with a positive result, it will
    be honourable for me to leave this country," Dink told the Associated Press
    news agency.
    Turkey's relationship with its once-sizeable Armenian community is still
    fraught with tension.
    Hundreds of thousands of Armenians died or were driven out of Turkey in 1915,
    in what many Armenians say was a genocide at the hands of Turks.
    Ankara denies the allegations, saying the death were a part of World War I in
    the dying days of the Ottoman empire.
Working...
X