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Turkey Must Note Slain Journalist's Legacy - Peter Balakian

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  • Turkey Must Note Slain Journalist's Legacy - Peter Balakian

    NewsWise Press Release
    Jan 20 2007

    Turkey Must Note Slain Journalist's Legacy, Says Expert

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    Life News (Social and Behavioral Sciences)

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    Description

    The assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was more
    than a senseless murder, says Colgate University professor and
    Armenian Genocide expert Peter Balakian - it shows just how far
    Turkey is from being a true democracy. Balakian is available to
    comment on Dink's death.


    Newswise - The assassination today of Turkish-Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink in Istanbul was more than a senseless murder, according to
    Colgate University professor and Armenian Genocide expert Peter
    Balakian - it was yet another example of how far Turkey is from being
    a democracy.

    Balakian, author of New York Times bestseller and Raphael Lemkin
    Prize winner The Burning Tigris; the Armenian Genocide and America's
    Response, is available to comment on Dink's death.

    `As editor of Agos, a weekly Armenian newspaper, Dink held a uniquely
    important place in Turkish society, so his slaying was particularly
    significant,' said Balakian. `If Turkey wishes to go forward as a
    democracy, it must find a way to embrace Dink's legacy.'

    Eighteen journalists have been killed in Turkey in the last six
    years, and 77 are on trial now, he said, but violence toward
    intellectuals begins, in the modern period, for Turkey with genocide
    of the Armenians in 1915. `Turkey has a long history of punishing its
    writers, thinkers, artists, and ethnic minorities,' he explained. `On
    April 24, 1915, at the beginning of the Armenian Genocide which
    claimed more than a million lives, the Ottoman government rounded up
    more than 250 Armenian leaders in Constantinople (Istanbul) and
    transported them out of the city. Most of them were killed, making it
    easier for the government at that time to carry out its planned
    extermination and exile of the rest of the Armenian population. Dink
    now joins those martyrs.'

    Political violence of this nature increased when Turkey began its
    accession to the European Union in recent years, said Balakian, and
    it is definitely not random. `The ruling party's attempts to meet the
    EU's conditions - among them, more freedom of expression, equal
    treatment of minorities, and an end to official government denial of
    the Armenian Genocide - amplified the resistance of extreme
    nationalists and the military to such reforms,' he said.

    Because of Dink's standing, Balakian believes the slaying will
    reverberate beyond Turkey. `His death is emblematic of the struggle
    for freedom of thought and expression people face under violent and
    repressive societies and governments all over the world.'

    Of Dink himself, Balakian commented: `Despite Turkey's penal code -
    which mandates prison sentences for a long list of offenses that
    constitute the crime of `insulting Turkishness' - Dink persisted in
    publishing articles and speaking openly about subjects that are taboo
    in Turkey, most notably the Armenian Genocide of 1915 committed by
    the government of the Ottoman Empire. For doing so he was put on
    trial last year, and threats against his life had increased
    dramatically in the last few weeks. Yet no amount of brutality and
    danger diminished his courage; he continued to work toward his goal,
    which was to help achieve a peaceful reconciliation between
    ethnically Armenian and Turkish society.'

    Balakian is the Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar Professor of the
    Humanities at Colgate.

    http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/52 6699/
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