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Huge outcry in Turkish press after slaying of journalist

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  • Huge outcry in Turkish press after slaying of journalist

    Agence France Presse -- English
    January 20, 2007 Saturday

    Huge outcry in Turkish press after slaying of journalist



    Turkish newspapers condemned Saturday the murder of prominent
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink as "a national shame," calling
    for his funeral to become a mass event in the name of democracy and
    peace in the country.

    "The murderer is a traitor," declared the mass-circulation Hurriyet
    on its front page, next to a huge portrait of Dink on a black
    background, while the popular Sabah headlined: "The greatest
    treason."

    Both dailies were using the epithet that nationalists have used to
    brand Dink and other intellectuals contesting the official line on
    the mass killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire, which much
    to Ankara's ire, many countries have recognized as genocide.

    "Bullets fired on democracy, fraternity and peace," the Milliyet
    newspaper trumpeted, while Radikal wrote "We are all Armenians, we
    are all Hrants," using one of the chants that thousands shouted
    during a protest march in Istanbul late Friday after an indentified
    assailant gunned down Dink outside the office of his Turkish-Armenian
    newspaper Agos.

    "Our Hrant is murdered," the Islamist Yeni Safak headlined,
    describing Dink as "an Armenian son of Turkey, a journalist devoted
    to democracy and free thought and a brave man."

    "Hrant's murder is our national shame," Milliyet columnist Semih Idiz
    wrote.

    "The only way to obliterate at least part of it is to bid him
    farewell as a nation -- from the president to the prime minister,
    from the main opposition leader to the army chief," he added.

    Many editorialists let their emotions flow at the loss of a
    colleague, who was last year given a suspended six-month sentence for
    insulting "Turkishness" in an article about the Armenian massacres
    and was frequently threatened by nationalists.

    "When I heard of Hrant's murder, I cried and cried -- for him or for
    my country, I do not know. What I know is that this shame will haunt
    us for many years to come," Sabah's Fatih Altayli said.

    Some commentators saw serious implications for Turkish foreign
    policy, with the popular Vatan stressing that Armenian campaigns for
    an international recognition of the 1915-17 massacres as genocide
    would gain strength.

    "This incident also plays in the hands of those who want to cut
    Turkey's ties with the West and block its accession to the European
    Union," Vatan columnist Okay Gonensin wrote.

    Politicians also came under fire for failing to quell what many see
    here as rising nationalism among Turks.

    "The politicians and the state establishment should see this
    assassination, committed in a time of rising fanaticism in Turkey, as
    an alarm bell. The target was not only Hrant Dink, but Turkey's
    stability," Mehmet Barlas wrote in Sabah.
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