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Obituary: Hrant Dink

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  • Obituary: Hrant Dink

    Hrant Dink

    Campaigning editor assassinated outside his Istanbul office

    Jonathan Fryer
    Monday January 22, 2007
    _The Guardian_ (http://www.guardian.co.uk/)


    Hrant Dink, who was assassinated aged 52 outside the Istanbul offices
    of Agos, the Turkish-Armenian weekly newspaper that he edited, was the
    most prominent advocate of mutual respect between Turkey's majority
    population and its Armenian minority. There have been tensions between
    the two communities since the ethnic cleansing of hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians from areas of what is now Turkey during the
    first world war. Revered by human rights activists for his stance
    against bigotry, he was reviled by Turkish ultra-nationalists, who
    considered him a traitor. He was prosecuted several times for the
    crime of "insulting Turkish identity" and in 2005, was sentenced to
    six months in jail. Recently, he had received numerous death threats,
    and had appealed in vain to the Turkish authorities for these to be
    taken seriously.

    Born in Malatya, Anatolia, into an Armenian family, Hrant, whose
    officially registered Turkish first name was Firat, was the son of a
    tailor whose marriage broke down during the boy's infancy. At the age
    of seven, Hrant was sent to Istanbul, where he lived at the Gedikpasa
    Armenian orphanage. There he met his wife, Rakel. He was expelled from
    his first secondary school for "leftist" political activity, but
    gained admission to Istanbul University to study zoology. He began
    postgraduate work in the philosophy department, but dropped out to
    become involved in youth work. Later he ran a bookshop with his wife.

    In 1994, he began writing columns in the Marmara Armenian newspaper,
    under the pseudonym "Chootag" (violin). But he soon realised that if
    he was goingto pursue his goal of building bridges between ethnic
    Turks and the Armenian minority, he needed to have a more substantial
    platform. Hence the creationof the weekly Turkish-Armenian newspaper
    Agos, of which he was founder and editor-in-chief.

    His detractors accused him of undermining the Turkish state, but as he
    protested: "I am an Armenian from Turkey, and a good Turkish
    citizen. I believe in the republic, in fact I would like it to become
    stronger and more democratic."

    In recent years, along with dozens of other journalists, writers and
    publishers, including the Nobel prize laureate Orhan Pamuk, Dink was
    systematically harassed, being subjected to a series of prosecutions
    often initiated by the extremist self-styled Union of Lawyers. He and
    other defendants were victims of verbal and physical intimidation,
    even in court. He found this part icularly stressful.

    A warm, sensitive man, who would greet an old friend with a bear hug,
    Dink experienced what he described as "psychological torture" as he
    tried to deal with the hatred targeted at him. "My computer's memory
    is loaded with sentences full of anger and threats," he wrote in his
    last column in Agos, published on January 10. "I am just like a
    pigeon, obsessively looking to my left and to my right, in front of me
    and behind me."

    The strain led to his crying during one television interview. But as
    he declared: "I will not be silent. As long as I live here I will go
    on telling the truth."

    Dink had critics even among the Armenian diaspora in Europe and north
    America as he failed to endorse their condemnation of Turkey's refusal
    to acknowledge that the massacres of Armenians in the closing years of
    the Ottoman Empire amounted to genocide. Though he did not
    underestimate the gravity of these events, he was appalled by the
    successful campaign by French-Armenians to get a law passed last year
    making it a crime in France to deny the Armenian genocide. He
    believed that this was contrary to freedom of expression.

    Dink's humane and liberal political stance won admirers among the more
    progressive elements in Turkish society, not least young people. He
    also became a focus for groups inside Turkey and abroad campaigning
    for freedom of expression. His case was raised by the European
    commission in the context of Turkey's aspiration to join the European
    Union and he recently encouraged the European court of human rights to
    intervene on his behalf. This further enraged the ultra-nationalists,
    who reject any external interference in Turkey's affairs and who
    oppose EU membership.

    Dink's murder provoked an angry statement from the Federation of
    French-Armenians, that "Turkey has killed Hrant Dink". But Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also expressed official revulsion at the
    killing.

    He is survived by Rakel and their two children, a daughter, Sera, and
    a son, Arat, who is also a journalist.

    · Hrant (Firat) Dink, editor and journalist, born September 15 1954;
    died January 19 2007
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