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IHT: Turkish police arrest teenager in killing of newspaper editor

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  • IHT: Turkish police arrest teenager in killing of newspaper editor

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Jan 21 2007


    Turkish police arrest teenager in killing of newspaper editor

    By Susanne Fowler
    Published: January 21, 2007

    ISTANBUL: A 17-year-old suspect was being held Sunday under heavy
    security in the shooting death of Hrant Dink, a Turkish journalist of
    Armenian descent, a killing that has intensified the debate here on
    the sensitive topics of national identity and freedom of expression
    during an important election year.

    The suspect, Ogun Samast, was captured Saturday night after his
    father recognized him from a surveillance camera photo shown by the
    media and alerted the authorities. Samast was arrested at the main
    bus station in the Black Sea coast city of Samsun, apparently on his
    way to his hometown of Trabzon. At least 12 other people were
    reportedly detained in Trabzon, and several were brought to Istanbul
    on Sunday for questioning, news reports said. Samast was being held
    at the Istanbul Police Headquarters in the Aksaray neighborhood.

    According to the state-run Anatolia news agency, the chief
    prosecutor, Ahmet Cokcinar, said Sunday that Samast was caught in
    possession of the gun used to kill Dink and had confessed to the
    brazen daylight attack. Dink, 52, the editor of the weekly bilingual
    newspaper Agos, was shot three times in the neck and head as he left
    work on a busy commercial avenue Friday.

    In his confession, according to the Dogan News Agency, Samast told
    the police that he had been reading Dink's columns via the Internet
    from Trabzon and did not like what he was reading and so "decided to
    kill him."

    He reportedly had requested a meeting with Dink but was turned down.

    "I would do it again," Samast was quoted as saying. "I have no
    regrets."

    Commentators on Sunday were speculating that because the suspect is a
    minor, he might have been influenced by someone who knew that a teen
    would face a lesser sentence if caught.

    The killing shocked this mostly Muslim nation and sent thousands of
    furious Turks into the streets during the weekend, waving placards
    and chanting, "We are all Armenians!"

    That statement is especially poignant in Turkey, where calling
    someone an Armenian is often considered an insult.

    Turkey and Armenia, which share a border but have no diplomatic ties,
    are at odds over Turkey's refusal to use the term "genocide" to
    describe the deaths of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians beginning
    in 1915. Turkey says the deaths resulted from war as the Ottoman
    Empire was crumbling and that many Turks also were killed.

    Some Turks have begun to feel betrayed by the European Union, which
    recently froze sections of the accession talks over issues related to
    Cyprus.

    "This killing is an ultimate result of increasing nationalism,
    isolationism and animosity toward minorities that the European Union
    fueled in its handling of Turkey's membership process," Can Baydarol,
    a European Union expert said. "If the EU pushes Turkey even further
    after this tragic incident, this would serve the interests of the
    extremist circles that Mr. Dink was in constant struggle with."

    Esra Uras, of the Liberal European Association, a pro-EU group, said
    that while the violence could dent Turkey's chances of eventual EU
    membership, "the government had actually handled the situation after
    the murder very well."

    Uras was among the thousands of marchers in Taksim Square after the
    killing.

    "We were all on the street shouting that 'We were all Dink' and for
    the first time the politicians showed leadership in such a crisis
    situation by joining in and becoming part of the group."

    "It must be clear," she said, "that Hrant Dink was someone who was
    really criticized by both Turks and Armenians, but from the point of
    view of freedom of speech and thought, this has sparked a new
    solidarity."

    There were others who said that Dink's legacy might be one of
    reconciliation between feuding Turks and Armenians.

    Sevan Sarafian, 39, was one of about 30 Turkish-Armenians attending
    the regular Sunday morning service at the Church of the Three Altars
    next to central Istanbul's fish bazaar and one of 41 Christian
    Armenian churches serving the estimated 60,000 ethnic Armenians that
    remain in Turkey.

    "When Dink was killed, I was so upset because he was a symbol of out
    community," said Sarafian, who runs a silver shop nearby. "Like any
    philosopher, Dink said things that I agreed with and things that I
    didn't agree with. But when all those people turned out to march
    after he was killed, I felt so happy to hear everyone say they were
    Armenian."

    "For Turkish Muslims to call themselves Armenians is really a major
    change," he said. "I hope it continues to bring the two communities
    much closer to work out their differences."

    The capture of a suspect was good news, Sarafian said, but it was
    just a beginning.

    "I will be much happier if they catch the people who put him up to
    it," he said. "I have many ideas about who that might be but I
    wouldn't like to say what those are."

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said at a news conference
    Saturday that the investigators were checking whether Samast had any
    ties to another Trabzon teenager who was convicted last year in the
    shooting death of Andrea Santoro, a Catholic priest in that city.

    Turkish media also reported that Samast was a friend of another young
    man from Trabzon who served 11 months in prison for bombing a
    McDonald's restaurant there in 2004.

    Dink had long been surrounded by controversy. He was in and out of
    court for years, charged with insulting Turkishness, which is a crime
    under Article 301 of the Turkish penal code.

    He was convicted in 2005 and the conviction was upheld on appeals in
    2006 but his six-month sentence was suspended.

    The Nobel Prize winning Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk was charged
    under the same law for his comments about Armenia but his case was
    dropped. The Milliyet daily newspaper reported Sunday that Pamuk was
    now under police protection.

    Ilter Turan, a professor at Istanbul Bilgi University, said that the
    killing would perhaps mark the start a new wave of democratic
    reforms.

    "The massive reactions against Dink's killing tell us that people are
    not proud of the extremism that prepared the grounds for this
    unfortunate event," Turan said.

    "At every level of the society, there is a desire to ease the
    international consequences of this event, which could trigger another
    wave of reforms in Turkey."

    Meanwhile, the site of Dink's killing has become a shrine, with
    flowers and posters and visits by grieving friends and politicians in
    this election year for Turkey.

    Deniz Baykal, head of the opposition Republican People's Party, known
    in Turkey by the acronym CHP, and an Erdogan rival, paid a highly
    publicized visit to the offices of Dink's newspaper Saturday.

    Later that night, Erdogan held a nationally broadcast news conference
    to say how glad he was that the suspect had been caught prior to
    Dink's funeral on Tuesday.

    But Erdogan also said that he would not attend the rites because of a
    prior commitment to join the former EU president and current prime
    minister of Italy, Romando Prodi, in the city of Bolu for the opening
    ceremony for a Turkish- Italian tunnel construction project.

    For Sarafian, the silver seller, the Turkish-Armenian conflict cuts
    to the core of his own identity issues.

    "When we are in Turkey, we are considered Armenians even though we
    were born here," he said. "But when we travel outside of Turkey, we
    use Turkish passports and we are not Armenians any more: We live our
    lives between the two identities."

    Sebnem Arsu contributed reporting for this article.
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