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Time: An Assassination Shocks Istanbul

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  • Time: An Assassination Shocks Istanbul

    TIME Magazine
    Jan 20 2007


    An Assassination Shocks Istanbul

    Friday, Jan. 19, 2007 By PELIN TURGUT/ISTANBUL Article

    ToolsPrintEmail In one of Turkey's most violent nationalist attacks
    in recent years, journalist Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian and one of
    the country's leading voices for reconciliation between Turks and
    Armenians, was shot dead in front of his office Friday. No group has
    yet claimed responsibility for Dink's murder, which has shocked
    Turks. Hundreds of mourners gathered in Istanbul's city center to
    protest the killing; politicians condemned the attack and the
    Istanbul Stock Exchange plunged several points. "A bullet has been
    fired at democracy and freedom of expression. I condemn the
    traitorous hands behind this disgraceful murder," said Prime Minister
    Tayyip Erdogan.

    Dink had been a frequent target of Turkish nationalist rage for his
    comments on the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during
    World War I. Hundreds of thousands of Armenians died in 1915, in what
    many Armenians say was a systematic massacre at the hands of the
    Ottoman Turks. Turkey however denies any genocide, saying that the
    deaths were part of a partisan conflict in which thousands of Turks
    were also killed. Even discussing the Armenian deaths was for many
    years taboo in Turkey but recently there have been stirrings of
    public debate as Ankara strives to bring the country in line with
    European Union norms. That same process of EU accession however, has
    also triggered a growing frenzy of nationalist sentiment, that has
    gained strength ahead of elections later this year as politicians of
    all stripes play the populist card, buoyed in their insularity by the
    less than enthusiastic reception given Ankara in Europe.

    In an article last week, Dink wrote that he felt "nervous and afraid"
    because of the intensity of the hate mail and threats he was
    receiving. "I see myself as frightened, the way a dove might be, but
    I know that the people in this country would never harm a dove," he
    wrote. Dink was the editor of the Istanbul-based Agos, a weekly
    newspaper published in Turkish and Armenian. He was a tireless
    campaigner for better relations between Turks and Armenians, who
    share a troubled history. [Turkey and neighbouring Armenia still have
    no official relations.]

    A soft-spoken, gregarious and often emotional man, Dink was
    well-respected among Turkey's literati for his consistently
    non-partisan approach to the Armenian issue. Despite being repeatedly
    hauled before the courts on charges like "insulting Turkishness" (the
    latest incarnation of an older anti-free speech law), he was always
    optimistic. "I would never consider living anywhere else," he told
    this writer on several occasions. "This is my country."

    In July, Turkey's appeals court upheld a suspended six-month sentence
    against Dink for an article he wrote on the collective memory of the
    massacres. He had been convicted on charges of "insulting
    Turkishness" - similar charges were brought, and later dropped,
    against Nobel prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk last year. In
    September, an Istanbul prosecutor filed yet another suit against
    Dink, seeking three years for describing the killings as genocide in
    an interview. Dink said in that interview: "Of course, I say this is
    a genocide. Because the result itself identifies what it is and gives
    it a name. You can see that people who have been living on these
    lands for 4,000 years have disappeared. This is self-explanatory."
    Responding to news of the assassination, Cem Ozdemir, a German Turk
    and Green Party member of Bundestag: "This is a hard blow for
    everyone who stands for peace, understanding and coming to terms with
    Turkey's past."

    http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,15 80657,00.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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