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  • Turkish journalist murdered

    Dominican Today, Dominican Republic
    Jan 20 2007

    Turkish journalist murdered


    Istanbul.- An outspoken journalist who repeatedly clashed with
    Turkish authorities over recognition of the early 20th Century
    slaughter of Armenians was shot to death in broad daylight on a busy
    Istanbul street on Friday.

    Hrant Dink, who as editor of a Turkish-Armenian newspaper was the
    leading voice for his ethnic community, died a week after he wrote
    about threats from unknown forces who he said regarded him "an enemy
    of the Turks."

    Hundreds of people marched from the city's central Taksim Square to
    the offices of Dink's Agos weekly newspaper on Friday evening near
    the spot on a sidewalk where he was shot in the head. They held
    candles and posters of him; a somber silence was interrupted
    periodically with applause and chants for "the brotherhood of
    peoples."

    Istanbul Governor Muammer Guler said late Friday that three people
    were detained in connection with the shooting, but no additional
    details were released.

    The slaying is likely to further darken Turkey's reputation for
    repressing critics of the government or of the country's tight
    control on how its turbulent past is portrayed.

    Dink, 52, was part of an elite group of writers and thinkers,
    including Nobel Literature laureate Orhan Pamuk and novelist Elif
    Safak, who have been tried on charges of insulting their country's
    "Turkishness" under an ambiguous law promoted by hard-line
    nationalists.

    While most, including Pamuk, were cleared, Dink was convicted in 2005
    for writing articles that criticized the law and explored questions
    of Turkish and Armenian identity. He was sentenced to a six-month
    term, which was suspended.

    Last year, an Istanbul court opened a new case against him after he
    told a foreign news agency that the World War I-era slaughter of
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians by Ottoman Turks was genocide.

    "Of course I say it was genocide," Dink had said. "With these events
    you see the disappearance of a people who lived on these lands for
    4,000 years."

    Dink helped promote a conference of academics in 2005 who gathered
    here to examine the era's mass killings. The government attempted to
    block the conference, and the justice minister accused participants
    of "stabbing Turkey in the back."

    On Friday, however, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was
    among the first to condemn Dink's "traitorous" and "disgraceful"
    murder.

    "Bullets have been fired at free thought and our democratic life,"
    Erdogan said at a news conference. He urged calm.
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