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  • Thousands protest in Turkey over journalist's murder

    Agence France Presse -- English
    January 19, 2007 Friday

    Thousands protest in Turkey over journalist's murder

    by Nicolas Cheviron
    ISTANBUL, Jan 19 2007


    Thousands of Turks took to the streets to protest against the
    assassination Friday of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who
    had angered many with his views on the World War I killings of
    Armenians.

    The biggest demonstration was in Istanbul where some 5,000 gathered
    outside the offices of Dink's newspaper, in the busy Sisli district,
    on the European side of the city, according to a police officer at
    the scene.

    Protestors met at the nearby Taksim Square, the city's main business
    and entertainment centre, before marching some three kilometers (two
    miles) to the offices of the weekly Agos newspaper where hundreds of
    others have kept a vigil since Dink's murder.

    "We are all Armenians. We are all Hrant Dink," chanted the
    protestors, many carrying red carnations and pictures of Dink with
    the inscription "My dear brother" in Turkish, Armenian and English.

    "Find the murderers," read a placard held by a protestor.

    One demonstrator waved Turkish and Armenian flags, some carried
    candles in their hands and others blew on whistles. Several of them
    were crying.

    At the offices of Agos, employees unfurled a large picture of Dink
    from a window and held up copies of their newspaper as the protestors
    applauded.

    Dink, the 53-year-old editor of the weekly newspaper, died when an
    unidentified assailant shot him three times in the head and neck just
    outside his office.

    A well-known and respected journalist, he had drawn the wrath of
    nationalists and the judiciary with his views on the 1915-18
    massacres of Armenians in the dying days of the Ottoman Empire, which
    was eventually replaced by the modern Turkish Republic.

    But he always insisted that he was a citizen of Turkey and would
    never work against his country.

    "Hearing that Hrant had died hurt me deeply. He was an honest
    intellectual. He went straight to the point. I felt I had to come to
    the demonstration," Ana Maria, a Turkish-Greek political sciences
    student, told AFP.

    Turkan Karazi, an interior designer, condemned the killing as the
    latest in a long line of political murders of intellectuals and
    journalists over the last three decades.

    "During our youth, we all suffered from similar murders and violence,
    such as the killing of Ugur Mumcu," an investigative reported killed
    in a 1993 car bomb attack in Ankara, she said. "We do not want it
    anymore."

    Nese Sonmez, a reporter for an economic newspaper, summed up the
    general feeling of the crowd with the words: "I am Turkish but
    tonight I feel Armenian."

    The demonstration began to wind down to a peaceful end after an
    employee of Agos asked them to disperse and called on them to come
    back Tuesday for a second day of protests.

    In Ankara, about 700 people -- trade unionists and human rights
    activists -- held a 30-minute sit-in in central Kizilay square, the
    Anatolia news agency reported.

    "We are all Armenians, French, Kurds and Turks. Long live the
    fraternity of the people," Yusuf Alatas, head of the Human Rights
    Association told the gathering.
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