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Anger in Armenia at Turkey over journalist death

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  • Anger in Armenia at Turkey over journalist death

    Agence France Presse -- English
    January 20, 2007 Saturday

    Anger in Armenia at Turkey over journalist death



    Armenians at home and abroad hammered Turkey Saturday following the
    killing of prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in
    Istanbul.

    "Turkish authorities should have guaranteed the security of Dink. He
    had received many threatening letters and had told police about
    them," said the Aikakan Dzhamanak (Armenian Times) newspaper.

    The Aravot (Morning) daily said: "Turkey's ability to become a
    civilised, reformed country and its readiness to integrate with
    Europe are in serious doubt."

    Dink, who was hated by Turkish nationalists for his views on the
    massacres of Armenians under Turkish rule during World War I, was
    shot dead outside his office in Istanbul on Friday.

    "The murder of Dink is not only aimed at freedom of speech," said a
    statement from the youth movement of the Armenian nationalist party
    Dashnaktsutyun.

    "It is also a sign of the renaissance of anti-Armenian hysteria in
    the country (Turkey), which carried out a genocide against Armenians
    at the beginning of the last century."

    Some 100 of the group's militants gathered outside the European Union
    mission in Yerevan, where they lit candles and laid carnations in
    front of Dink's portrait.

    The press service of the Armenian Church said a special memorial
    service for Dink would be held Sunday in all Armenian churches,
    including the main cathedral of Echmiadzin.

    "Dink's untimely death has shocked all of us. We condemn this murder,
    which took away a talented and brave son of his people, with profound
    indignation," Armenian patriarch Karekin II said in a statement.

    Outside of Armenia, there are many Armenian churches spread across
    Europe, the Middle East and the United States, attended by a large
    diaspora of ethnic-Armenians.

    In France hundreds of members of the Armenian community gathered near
    the Turkish embassy in Paris, carrying flags and portraits of the
    journalist, while police kept them away from the building.

    "The Turkish authorities bear the primary guilt for their prosecution
    of this human rights activist," the head of the council of Armenian
    organisations in France, Alexis Govciyan, said.

    Ara Toranian, editor of the monthly magazine Nouvelles d'Armenie,
    said the Turkish state and its "obtuse leadership" were responsible,
    adding that Dink was "the latest victim" of the Armenian genocide.

    Hundreds more protestors rallied at the Turkish consulate in
    Marseille.

    Armenian analysts said the killing would have little impact on ties
    between Turkey and neighbouring Armenia, which have been effectively
    frozen since the fall of the Soviet Union.

    "I don't think the killing will lead to any major changes in
    Turkish-Armenian relations," said Alexander Iskandarian, director of
    the Caucasus Media Institute in Yerevan.

    "Those who were against opening the border with Turkey will say that
    a Turk is still a Turk, Turkey is still a dangerous neighbour and the
    border shouldn't be opened," Iskandarian said.

    "Those in favour of opening will say that such things happen
    everywhere."

    The 355-kilometre (221-mile) border between the two countries was
    closed in 1993 at the height of the Nagorno-Karabakh war in which
    ethnic-Armenian separatists in Azerbaijan took over almost a fifth of
    Azerbaijani territory.

    Armenia backed the separatists, while Turkey supported Azerbaijan.

    In recent months, Armenian government ministers have expressed the
    hope that diplomatic relations will be restored with Turkey and the
    border reopened in order to boost trade and transport potential in
    the region.

    Views in Turkey and Armenia over the killings of ethnic-Armenians in
    the Ottoman Empire during World War I are still deeply divided.

    Armenians say that up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered
    between 1915 and 1918 and want the massacres to be internationally
    recognized as genocide.

    Turkey rejects the genocide label and argues that 300,000 Armenians
    and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when Armenians took
    up arms for independence.
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