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  • Bullet 'fired at freedom of thought'

    Globe and Mail, Canada
    Jan 20 2007

    Bullet 'fired at freedom of thought'
    ESTANISLAO OZIEWIC and NICHOLAS BIRCH

    Globe and Mail Update

    TORONTO and ISTANBUL - One of the most prominent members of Turkey's
    dwindling Armenian community was shot dead outside his newspaper
    office in central Istanbul yesterday in an attack the Turkish Prime
    Minister said was aimed at destabilizing the country.

    "A bullet was fired at freedom of thought and democratic life," Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, shortly after Hrant Dink was shot
    several times from behind outside Agos, the bilingual
    Armenian-Turkish newspaper he edited.

    The slaying brought into brutal relief Turkey's roiling relationship
    with its ethnic Armenian citizens over painful and wildly divergent
    memories of a brutal past.

    The controversy over whether mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks in 1915 constituted genocide has spilled far beyond Turkey and
    Europe, which is considering Turkey's entry into its union.

    In Canada, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government has both
    formally recognized that a genocide occurred and, in a seeming
    contradiction, supported Istanbul's proposal for a fresh study of
    those events.

    Taro Alepian, chairman of the Congress of Canadian Armenians, said in
    a statement that Mr. Dink's assassination "should now be transformed
    into an opportunity for reconciliation between the people of Turkey
    and Armenians around the world."

    Mr. Alepian said extremists who killed Mr. Dink should not be allowed
    to have the final word.

    "This was an organized attempt by those who want to destroy Turkey's
    European Union aspirations and cast Turkey into darkness," said Akin
    Birdal, former head of Turkey's Human Rights Association, himself
    shot and severely wounded in 1998 by suspected nationalists.

    Turkey has long maintained that the deaths nearly a century ago were
    caused by civil strife, diseases and famine during the collapse of
    the Ottoman Empire. And it has prosecuted Mr. Dink and others for
    daring to question the official state denial that the genocide
    occurred.

    In October, 2005, Mr. Dink was convicted of trying to influence the
    judiciary after Agos ran stories criticizing a law making it a crime
    to denigrate Turkey, the Turkish government or the Turkish national
    character. He was given a six-month suspended sentence.

    They were the same charges that had been levelled at Nobel
    prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk.

    Amnesty International said yesterday that official attitudes in
    Turkey and laws suppressing freedom of speech give rise to violence.

    "These laws, coupled with the persisting official statements by
    senior government, state and military officials condemning critical
    debate and dissenting opinion, create an atmosphere in which violent
    attacks can take place," said Amnesty's Nicola Duckworth.

    Mr. Dink, a frequent target of Turkish nationalist anger over his
    defence of freedom of speech, had been complaining of death threats
    for weeks. "My computer's memory is loaded with sentences full of
    hatred and threats," he wrote in his Agos column on Jan. 10.

    One e-mail threatening his children worried him particularly, he
    wrote, adding that police had taken no action after he complained.

    Set up in 1996, the weekly Agos was the fruit of his belief that only
    dialogue could resolve the bitter memories of the 1915 events.

    In fact, Mr. Dink was vehemently opposed to a proposed French law
    that would imprison anyone who publicly denies that the massacre of
    Armenians was a genocide.

    "I have been tried in Turkey for saying the Armenian genocide exists,
    and I have talked about how wrong this is," Mr. Dink said in an
    interview with CNN-Turk last year. "But if this bill becomes law, I
    will be one of the first to head to France and break the law. Then we
    can watch Turkey and the French government race to see which will
    throw me in jail first."

    His slaying comes at a crucial time for Turkey, which is preparing
    itself for presidential and parliamentary elections later this year.

    It also coincides with growing EU pressure on Turkey to resolve
    continuing problems with its minorities. Last week, the European
    Court of Human Rights ordered Turkey to pay 900,000 in damages to a
    Turkish Greek religious foundation whose Istanbul property had been
    confiscated by the state.

    A law that would have helped Greek, Armenian and Jewish minorities
    win back confiscated properties was vetoed last year by Turkish
    President Ahmet Necdet Sezer.

    Over the past week, Turkish newspapers have been full of reports that
    the new Democrat-weighted U.S. Congress may recognize the Armenian
    genocide.

    Murat Celikkan, a friend of Mr. Dink's, said he was one of the few
    who dared speak out.

    "The fact that he spoke for peace and brotherhood makes no difference
    to the people who did this. Because this is a country where hate
    speech is not stamped out, but promoted."

    A crowd gather in front of Mr. Dink's office and chanted, "Shoulder
    to shoulder against fascism," and "We are all Hrant, we are all
    Armenians."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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