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Robert Fisk: Award-winning writer shot by assassin in Istanbul

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  • Robert Fisk: Award-winning writer shot by assassin in Istanbul

    The Independent, UK
    Jan 20 2007

    Robert Fisk: Award-winning writer shot by assassin in Istanbul street

    Published: 20 January 2007


    Hrant Dink became the 1,500,001st victim of the Armenian genocide
    yesterday. An educated and generous journalist and academic - editor
    of the weekly Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos - he tried to create a
    dialogue between the two nations to reach a common narrative of the
    20th century's first holocaust. And he paid the price: two bullets
    shot into his head and two into his body by an assassin in the
    streets of Istanbul yesterday afternoon.

    It was not only a frightful blow to Turkey's surviving Armenian
    community but a shattering reversal to Turkey's hope of joining the
    European Union, a visionary proposal already endangered by the
    country's broken relations with Cyprus and its refusal to acknowledge
    the genocide for what it was: the deliberate mass killing of an
    entire race of Christian people - 1,500,000 in all - by the country's
    Ottoman Turkish government in 1915. Winston Churchill was among the
    first to call it a holocaust but to this day, the Turkish authorities
    deny such a definition, ignoring documents which Turkey's own
    historians have unearthed to prove the government's genocidal intent.

    The 53-year-old journalist, who had two children, was murdered at the
    door of his newspaper. Just over a year ago, he was convicted under
    Turkey's notorious law 301 of "anti-Turkishness", a charge he
    strenuously denied even after he received a six-month suspended
    sentence from an Istanbul court.

    The EU has demanded that Turkey repeal the law under which the
    country also tried to imprison Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan
    Pamuk. At the time of his trial, Dink appeared on Turkish television
    in tears. "I'm living together with Turks in this country," he said
    then. "And I'm in complete solidarity with them. I don't think I
    could live with an identity of having insulted them in this country."

    It is a stunning irony that Dink had accused his fellow Armenians in
    an article of allowing their enmity towards the Turks for the
    genocide to have a "poisoning effect on your blood" - and that the
    court took the article out of context and claimed he was referring to
    Turkish blood as poisonous.

    Dink told news agency reporters in 2005 that his case had arisen from
    a question on what he felt when, at primary school, he had to take a
    traditional Turkish oath: "I am a Turk, I am honest, I am
    hard-working." In his defence, Dink said: "I said that I was a
    Turkish citizen but an Armenian and that even though I was honest and
    hard-working, I was not a Turk, I was an Armenian." He did not like a
    line in the Turkish national anthem that refers to "my heroic race".
    He did not like singing that line, he said, "because I was against
    using the word 'race', which leads to discrimination".

    Pamuk had earlier faced a court for talking about the 1915 genocide
    in a Swiss magazine. Leading Turkish publishers say that there is now
    an incendiary atmosphere in Turkey towards all writers who want to
    tell the truth about the genocide, when vast areas of Turkish Armenia
    were dispossessed of their Christian populations. Tens of thousands
    of men were massacred by Turkish gendarmerie - and by Kurds - while
    many Armenian women and children were raped and butchered in the
    northern Syrian deserts. The few survivors still alive have described
    the burning of living Armenian children on bonfires.

    In fact, a book published in Turkey and in the United States by
    Turkish scholar Tamer Akcam gives documentary details of the orders
    passed down from the Ottoman government in what was then
    Constantinople for the deliberate and industrialised killing of the
    Armenians. Thousands were also suffocated in underground caves in
    what were the world's first gas chambers. Adolf Hitler asked his
    generals in 1939: "Who remembers the Armenians?" And he went on to
    begin the Holocaust of the Jews of Poland. Whether the police
    discover that Dink's murderer is a Turkish nationalist - or even,
    though it might seem inconceivable, an Armenian nationalist outraged
    by his earlier remarks - will be an important proof of the country's
    willingness to confront its past.
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