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Turkey Teenager "Confesses" To Killing Armenian Journalist

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  • Turkey Teenager "Confesses" To Killing Armenian Journalist

    BosNewsLife, Hungary
    Jan 21 2007

    Turkey Teenager "Confesses" To Killing Armenian Journalist
    Sunday, 21 January 2007 (2 hours ago)
    By BosNewsLife News Center

    Suspect was identified in camera footage. ISTANBUL, TURKEY

    (BosNewsLife)-- A teenager suspected of killing Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink has confessed to the murder, police officials
    said Sunday, January 21.


    Ogun Samast, 17, told police he had read on the Internet that Dink
    had said "Turkish blood was dirty" so he had decided to kill him.
    Istanbul governor Muammer Guler said police captured the boy late on
    Saturday on a bus in Samsun still carrying the gun allegedly used in
    the murder.

    The teenager reportedly said he did not regret the killing. Samast
    was identified after his father informed authorities that the suspect
    shown on television was his son, officials added.

    The police investigation is continuing as six other people are also
    being held. Prime Minister Tayyip Recep Erdogan said he was pleased
    the suspect had been brought into police custody in such a short
    time.

    The killing has shocked people across the country. "I feel happy the
    murderer has been saptured as much as I feel sad at Hrant Dink's
    death," a man in Ankara said in television footage aired by Euronews
    Television.

    A member of Istanbul's small Turkish-Armenian community said: "Our
    pain is so great ecause Hrant meant something to us. We Turkish
    Armenians living here are really scared by the assassination and we
    don't know how this fear will go away."

    MASSACRE

    Dink, 53, wrote about the alleged massacre of up to 1.5 million
    Armenian, Assyrian and Hellenic Christians carried out by Turkish
    Ottoman forces in the 1915-1917 period. Turkey's government has
    denied the figure or the involvement of Turkish forces in mass
    killings. It says the events did not constitute genocide and claims
    that no more than 300,000 Armenians perished at the time.

    Turkey has said that most Armenians died from hunger and disease
    after they were forcibly deported from eastern Turkey for having
    collaborated with invading Russian forces in the last days of the
    Ottoman Empire.

    Dink was given a six-month suspended sentence in October 2005 after
    writing about especially the killings of Armenians and describing the
    events as "genocide". In his last article, he referred to the
    sentencing saying that when "the decision came out" his "hopes were
    crushed."

    >From then on, he added, he was "in the most distressed situation a
    person" could possibly be in. "The judge had made a decision in the
    name of the "Turkish nation" and had it legally registered that I had
    "denigrated Turkishness." I could have coped with anything but this,"
    he wrote.

    TURKISHNESS

    The laws on Turkishness have also encouraged attacks against
    Christian leaders and missionaries, churches and human rights groups
    say. Just before he died, Dink made clear he had received death
    threats. "The memory of my computer is filled with angry, threatening
    lines sent by citizens from this sector... How real are these
    threats? To be honest, it is impossible for me to know for sure."

    However the journalist said he and his family decided to stay in
    Turkey to continue what they saw as their fight for justice.

    "2007 will probably be an even harder year for me," he predicted.
    "The court cases will continue, new ones will be initiated and God
    knows what kind of additional injustices I will have to face. I may
    see myself as frightened as a pigeon, but I know that in this country
    people do not touch pigeons. Pigeons can live in cities, even in
    crowds. A little scared perhaps, but free."

    On Sunday, January 21, flowers and candles were seen in the street in
    Istanbul where he was eventually gunned-down. (With BosNewsLife Chief
    International Correspondent Stefan J. Bos).
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