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Journalist murder revives memories of Turkey's political killings

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  • Journalist murder revives memories of Turkey's political killings

    Agence France Presse -- English
    January 19, 2007 Friday


    Journalist murder revives memories of Turkey's political killings

    Burak Akinci

    ANKARA, Jan 19 2007


    The murder Friday of prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink
    is only the latest in a long line of political killings Turkey has
    had to suffer over the past three decades, observers said.

    Although police gave no motive for the shooting in Istanbul, leaders
    from all parties joined the media in immediately labelling it a
    "political assassination."

    "This is the worst thing that has happened to Turkey in recent
    years," commented Erkan Mumcu, chairman of the conservative
    opposition Motherland Party.

    He said in a television interview that it would serve as fodder for
    opponents of Ankara's bid to join the European Union, already
    critical of Turkey's human rights record despite a marked improvement
    in recent years.

    "Nothing can justify such an act," commented Onur Ã-ymen of the
    centre-left Republican People's Party, the main opposition, calling
    for "an end to political assassinations" in this country.

    "This is extremely serious," said Mehmet Dulger, chairman of the
    parliament's foreign affairs committee. "Political killings should be
    a thing of the past -- we should forget about this sort of thing."

    "This tragedy will have very harmful effects on Turkey," said
    journalist Cengiz Candar, saying the murder was "obviously
    pre-meditated and well-planned."

    Another journalist, Derya Sazak, called for a mass mobilization to
    protest against what he called "no doubt ... a political
    assassination, which must not remain unsolved."

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan vowed swift action and promised
    the perpetrators would quickly be brought to justice, but most of
    Dink's friends remained skeptical, his lawyer Erdal Dogan saying: "I
    strongly doubt the killer will ever be found."

    Turkey has been plagued since the 1970s by a series of murders of
    prominent politicians, journalists and academics, often under similar
    circumstances; in most cases, their killers were never found.

    One exception was the popular liberal newspaper editor Abdi Ipekci,
    gunned down near his Istanbul home in 1979 by Mehmet Ali Agca, an
    ultra-right wing hit-man who gained international prominence when he
    tried to kill the late pope John Paul II in 1981.

    Ugur Mumcu, a popular author, investigative reporter and staunch
    defender of Turkey's secular system, died in 1993 when a bomb placed
    in his car exploded as he turned the ignition in front of his
    residential Ankara home.

    Hundreds of thousands of people lined the streets of the capital for
    his funeral, and the turnout was matched in 1999 for Ahmet Taner
    Kislali.

    The former culture minister, academic, newspaper columnist and
    fervent secularist died when a booby-trapped package left on the
    bonnet of his car exploded as he tried to brush it off outside his
    suburban Ankara home.

    Professor Bahriye �çok, a secularist and one of very few women to
    become a theology professor in Turkey, was killed by a package bomb
    delivered to her home in 1990.

    Another prominent secularist academic, law professor Muammer Aksoy,
    had been gunned down in front of his house in Ankara just eight
    months earlier.

    The 1970s too were rife in killings of right- and left-wing
    personalities as militants of rival political camps dragged Turkey
    into near civil war; the main reason the army cited to justify its
    September 1980 coup, just nine years after Turkey's previous military
    putsch.

    The latest headline-grabbing political killing occurred only last
    year, when an Islamist lawyer sprayed gunfire at a meeting of
    magistrates at the Council of State, Turkey's top administrative
    court, killing one judge and wounding several others.

    The gunman, who said he was protesting against a court ruling to
    maintain a ban on women wearing Islamic headscarves in government
    offices, was immediately arrested. His trial continues.
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