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Teenager admits to killing writer, but has 'no regrets'

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  • Teenager admits to killing writer, but has 'no regrets'

    Teenager admits to killing writer, but has 'no regrets'
    By Peter Popham

    The Independent/UK
    22 January 2007


    Turkish police have arrested a 17-year-old on suspicion of murdering
    Hrant Dink, Turkey's most prominent citizen of Armenian descent, who
    was shot dead in cold blood outside his newspaper office on Friday.

    Ogun Samast, from the Black Sea town of Trabzon, told police: "I read
    on the internet that he [Dink] said, 'I am from Turkey but Turkish
    blood is dirty' and I decided to kill him ... I do not regret this."

    The youth, who was arrested on Saturday in the Black Sea port of
    Samsun as he was travelling home by bus, became the chief suspect
    after his father told police that he recognised him from footage
    captured by a security camera. Police said he was still carrying the
    murder weapon.

    Hrant Dink, 53, founded Agos, a weekly newspaper for Turkey's Armenian
    community, in 1996 and had edited it ever since. He was the best-known
    face of the Armenian community in Turkey, and his murder immediately
    provoked demonstrations. Shocked and emotional protesters stood
    outside his office chanting: "We are all Armenians, we are all Hrant
    Dink."

    Far from being a simple-minded Armenian nationalist, Dink had attacked
    those who tried to politicise Turkish-Armenian antagonism, and
    emphasised his solidarity with the Turks among whom he lived.

    When France passed a law making it a criminal offence to deny that
    Turkey had committed genocide on the Armenians, Dink said he would go
    to France and deny it. But it was the Armenian genocide and Dink's
    insistence that Turks face up to their guilt that led to his
    conviction last year on a charge of "insulting Turkishness", to the
    hundreds of threats to his life that subsequently flooded his office,
    and ultimately, it appears, to his murder.

    And Dink saw it all coming. In an article published in his newspaper
    the day before he died, he wrote: "In the corridors of the law courts,
    fascists were attacking me with racist curses. Hundreds of threats via
    phone calls, e-mails and letters were pouring down, increasing in
    number day by day ... It is obvious that those wishing to single me
    out and render me weak and defenceless have achieved their goal. My
    computer is full of messages full of rage and threats."

    Yet he dared to hope that he would face them down. "I may see myself
    as frightened as a pigeon," he wrote, "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..."

    The bitter irony is that the Dink never said "Turkish blood is
    dirty". In the article for which he was convicted, he had exhorted
    Armenians to "purify their blood of hatred for the Turks". In court
    Dink maintained that it was "a call for peace", but nationalists bent
    on punishing him for his prominence insisted that he was guilty. The
    garbling of his words in the media made his personal situation, in a
    country which, despite its size and growing wealth, remains morbidly
    sensitive to humiliation, increasingly perilous.

    Six other suspects were arrested at the same time as Mr Samast and
    were being questioned in Istanbul yesterday. Minors are often employed
    as hit-men in Turkey because they are interrogated by public
    prosecutors instead of police and minors' courts tend to hand out
    milder sentences.

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's Prime Minister, condemned Dink's
    murder, saying "a bullet has been fired at Turkish democracy". After
    the arrests, he said: "We're going to continue investigations with the
    same determination."

    But it was Mr Erdogan's government that passed the law making
    "insulting Turkishness" a criminal offence, and it has yet to repeal
    it despite vowing to do so. Dozens of writers and intellectuals have
    been accused under the law, including the Nobel Prize-winning novelist
    Orhan Pamuk, but Dink was the only person to have been convicted.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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