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Armenian Journalist Killed by Gunman

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  • Armenian Journalist Killed by Gunman

    Christian Broadcasting Network, VA
    Jan 19 2007

    Armenian Journalist Killed by Gunman
    By Benjamin Harvey
    Associated Press Writer
    January 19, 2007


    CBNNews.com - ISTANBUL, Turkey - A journalist who faced constant
    threats and protests as one of the most prominent voices of Turkey's
    shrinking Armenian community was shot to death Friday at the entrance
    to his newspaper's offices, police said.

    Hrant Dink, a 53-year-old Turkish citizen of Armenian descent, had
    gone on trial numerous times for speaking out about the mass killings
    of Armenians by Turks at the beginning of the 20th century. He had
    also received threats from nationalists, who viewed him as a traitor.


    In October 2005, he was convicted of trying to influence the
    judiciary after the bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper he edited,
    Agos, ran stories criticizing a law making it a crime to insult
    Turkey, the Turkish government or the Turkish national character.

    He was given a six-month suspended sentence.

    The conviction was rare even in a country where trials of
    journalists, academics and writers have become common. Most of the
    cases, including that of the Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan
    Pamuk, were either dropped on a technicality or led to acquittals.

    Dink cried during an interview with The Associated Press last year as
    he talked about some of his countrymen's hatred for him, saying he
    could not stay in a country where he was unwanted.

    "I'm living together with Turks in this country," Dink told the AP.
    "I don't think I could live with an identity of having insulted them
    in this country. if I am unable to come up with a positive result, it
    will be honorable for me to leave this country."

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned Dink's death as an
    attack against Turkey's unity and promised to catch those
    responsible.

    Erdogan said two suspects had been arrested, but offered no details.

    "Once again, dark hands have chosen our country and spilled blood in
    Istanbul to achieve their dark goals," Erdogan said at a news
    conference.

    The prime minister said he had assigned top officials from the
    Justice Ministry to the case and that they were on their way to
    Istanbul from the capital, Ankara.
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