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Leading Armenian journalist murdered in Istanbul

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  • Leading Armenian journalist murdered in Istanbul

    Leading Armenian journalist murdered in Istanbul
    Sam Knight and agencies

    Times Online/UK
    January 19, 2007

    A prominent newspaper editor and leading figure in Turkey's Armenian
    community has been murdered in Istanbul.



    Hrant Dink, a vigorous defender of Armenians who frequently fell foul
    of the Government's free-speech laws and hardline Turkish
    nationalists, was shot several times in the neck as he emerged from
    the offices of the Agos newspaper in Istanbul this afternoon.

    In his final newspaper column Dink, 53, described how his willingness
    to criticise the Government and articulate the views of Turkey's
    Armenian community had led to dozens of death threats. He complained
    that he had been offered no protection by the police.

    "My computer's memory is loaded with sentences full of hatred and
    threats," he wrote. "I am just like a pigeon ... I look around to my
    left and right, in front and behind me as much as it does. My head is
    just as active."

    Witnesses and Turkish media reports described the gunman as a young
    man, around 18 or 19, wearing denim jacket and a white hat. The
    Turkish Prime Minister later said that two men had been arrested over
    the shooting and top officials from the Justice Department had been
    appointed to investigate.

    The killing of Dink, who was convicted last year under laws that
    forbid journalists from "insulting Turkish identity", caused the
    Turkish stock market to fall. The country's fractious relationship
    with its writers and its past, notably the Armenian genocide that
    followed the First World War, is seen as a major obstacle to Turkey's
    eventual admission to the EU.

    At a rushed news conference, the Prime Minister, Tayyip Erdogan,
    described the murder as an attack on Turkey's peace and
    stability. Hundreds of bystanders gathered around Dink's body, which
    lay face down and covered by a white sheet, and chanted "the murderer
    Government will pay".

    Friends of Dink said the writer and editor challenged Turkey's
    reluctance to face up to its past and failure to properly respect its
    minority communities. "Hrant was a perfect target for those who want
    to obstruct Turkey's democratisation and its path towards the European
    Union," said Aydin Engin, a journalist for Agos, where Dink's brother
    also works.

    "This bullet was fired against Turkey... an image has been created
    about Turkey that its Armenian citizens have no safety," Taha Akyol,
    the editor of CNN Turk.

    Dink had been prosecuted several times because of articles published
    in Agos, an influential bilingual newspaper that appears in Turkish
    and Armenian. He was unafraid to confront the Government with the
    history of the Armenian genocide and in late 2005 was charged with
    insulting Turkey for referring to the long-held Armenian wish to live
    separately from Turks.

    Last July, Dink told Reuters that his writings had led to several
    death threats but that he refused to go abroad, a decision his friends
    spoke of with dismay today.

    "I will not leave this country. If I go I would feel I was leaving
    alone the people struggling for democracy in this country. It would be
    a betrayal of them. I could never do this," he said.

    In the end, Dink was convicted of trying to influence his trial by
    allowing a series of articles to appear in Agos criticising Turkey's
    penal code. His six-month suspended prison sentence ' an unusually
    harsh penalty ' was then upheld last year by Turkey's court of appeal,
    a verdict that led to condemnation from Brussels. Earlier this month,
    he predicted that 2007 would a difficult year, but that he would
    survive.

    "For me, 2007 is likely to be a hard year. The trials will continue,
    new ones will be started. Who knows what other injustices I will be up
    against?"
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