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Turkey reeling from death of Armenian journalist

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  • Turkey reeling from death of Armenian journalist

    CTV.ca, Canada
    Jan 20 2007

    Turkey reeling from death of Armenian journalist
    Updated Sat. Jan. 20 2007 7:51 AM ET

    Associated Press

    ISTANBUL, Turkey -- Turkey's prime minister on Saturday conveyed his
    nation's sense of shock a day after a journalist and Armenian
    community leader was assassinated at the entrance to his bilingual
    Turkish-Armenian newspaper.

    Officials released a photo of the young man they suspect killed Hrant
    Dink, who received numerous death threats for his views that Turks
    carried out a genocide against the minority Armenians early in the
    20th century.

    "The bullets aimed at Hrant Dink were shot into all of us," Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said. Within hours of Dink's murder, he
    had sent his interior minister and justice minister to Istanbul to
    lead the investigation.

    Dink, who had faced trials for the genocide claims, was shot and
    killed Friday in broad daylight. No suspects are in custody.

    He wrote in his last newspaper column that he was so worried about
    attacks that his head swiveled like a pigeon's as he moved around
    Istanbul.

    Most Turks assumed the shooting was a reaction to Dink's public
    statements that the mass killings of Armenians around the time of
    World War I constituted genocide. Nationalists see such statements as
    insults to the honor of Turks and as threats to national unity.

    Whatever the motivation, the killing made it clear that Turkey
    remains a place where people speak freely at their own peril, despite
    generations of Western-looking liberal reforms and the nation's
    commitment to joining the European Union.

    The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists said Turkey was
    the eighth deadliest country in the world for journalist, with 18
    killed in the past 15 years for their work. Turkey's Zaman newspaper
    said 62 journalists have been assassinated in the nation's 84-year
    history.

    Dink, 52, was often subjected to more subtle attempts to silence him.
    He was one of dozens of journalists, writers and academics who have
    gone on trial for expressing their opinions here, most under the
    infamous article 301 of the penal code, which makes it a crime to
    insult Turkey, its government or the national character.

    In the most famous case, Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk
    faced jail time last year for insulting Turkey by saying Turks had
    killed a million Armenians. His case was dropped on a technicality.

    Dink clearly sensed his life was in danger.

    "My computer's memory is loaded with sentences full of anger and
    threats," he wrote on Jan. 10 in his last newspaper column. "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."

    In the past few years, Turks had come to know Dink well, mostly
    because of the high-profile cases opened against him. In late 2005,
    Turks saw him lose his composure, crying on television as he
    discussed his latest court case and what it was like to live amid
    people who hated him.

    A Turkish citizen, Dink said he would stay here, however, in the
    hopes that cases he opened at the European Court of Human Rights
    would be resolved in his favor, and do something to improve his
    country.

    Turkey's relationship with its Armenian community has long been
    fraught with tension, controversy and painful memories of a brutal
    past.

    Much of Turkey's once-sizeable Armenian population was killed or
    driven out beginning around 1915 in what an increasing number of
    countries are recognizing as the first genocide of the 20th century.

    Turks vehemently deny that their ancestors committed genocide,
    however, and saying so is tantamount to treason. In the 1970s and
    1980s, tensions were further inflamed as dozens of Turkish diplomats
    were killed by Armenian assassins seeking revenge.

    Turkey, which is 99 percent Muslim, and Armenia, which claims to be
    the first country to officially adopt Christianity, share a border.
    But the border is closed, and the two countries have no formal
    diplomatic relations.
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