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NYT: Armenian Editor's Death Leads to Conciliation

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  • NYT: Armenian Editor's Death Leads to Conciliation

    New York Times, NY
    Jan 23 2007

    Armenian Editor's Death Leads to Conciliation
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    By SUSANNE FOWLER and SEBNEM ARSU

    Published: January 23, 2007

    ISTANBUL, Jan. 22 - The killing of an Armenian-Turkish editor in
    Istanbul last week and the sorrow it has generated within Turkey are
    leading to rare conciliatory gestures between Turkey and Armenia,
    historic enemies, and to calls for changes in laws here defending
    Turkish identity.

    On Monday, Armenian political and spiritual figures accepted an
    invitation from the Turkish government to attend the funeral of Hrant
    Dink, the founder of an Armenian-Turkish newspaper, who was killed
    outside his office on Friday, apparently by a young nationalist
    fanatic.

    The suspect in the slaying, Ogun Samast, 17, was escorted back to
    the scene of the crime Sunday night by law enforcement authorities.

    The head of the Istanbul security forces said that Mr. Samast "was
    driven to commit the crime by his nationalistic feelings" and had no
    ties to any group.

    Mr. Dink was a staunch defender of free speech and like other
    intellectuals was prosecuted for insulting "Turkishness" and sentenced
    to six months in jail, though his term was suspended.

    Bulent Arinc, the parliamentary chairman from the ruling Justice and
    Development Party, said he would back efforts to abolish the measure
    under which Mr. Dink was prosecuted, known as Article 301.

    "It can be discussed to totally abolish or completely revise the
    Article 301," Mr. Arinc said, adding that members of Parliament
    "are open to this."

    Despite the fact that the Armenian-Turkish border has been sealed
    since 1993 and diplomatic relations severed, Armenia is sending
    a deputy foreign minister, Arman Kirakossian, to the funeral, and
    the archbishop of the Armenian Church of America, Khajag Barsamian,
    also accepted the government's invitation to the ceremony.

    Earlier, the Armenian defense minister, Serzh Sarkisyan, called for
    improved relations so that Armenia could "establish ties with Turkey
    with no preconditions," the Turkish news channel NTV reported.

    High-level Turkish government officials are expected to attend the
    funeral.

    Turkey and Armenia have long been at odds over Turkey's refusal
    to use the term "genocide" to describe the deaths of Armenians
    beginning in 1915. Many scholars and most Western governments say
    more than a million Armenians were killed in a campaign they describe
    as genocide. Turkey calls the loss of life a consequence of a war
    in which both sides suffered casualties, and has suggested that a
    group of envoys from each country analyze the history. Armenia has
    expressed a willingness to participate but insists that the border
    must first be reopened to trade.

    But many Armenians living abroad hold a much harder line and are
    lobbying the United States and European governments to deny Turkey
    entrance into the European Union until Ankara recognizes the killings
    as genocide.

    Norman Stone, professor of history at Koc University in Istanbul, said
    Mr. Dink was killed at a time when Turkey was reacting to pressure
    to respond to the Armenian issue.

    "There are a lot of balanced people here who say, 'Look, the genocide
    issue is unclear, but if you just leave it as a matter of massacres,
    then we can start making progress,' " Mr. Stone said.

    The funeral is shaping up to be far more than a farewell to a popular
    though controversial figure. The fact that the government is permitting
    it to take place on a grand scale is another sign of a change.

    A wide boulevard in the heart of Istanbul's main commercial district
    will be closed to traffic as the funeral cortege gathers outside the
    offices of the newspaper where Mr. Dink was shot.

    The mayor of the district, Mustafa Sarigul, said the local government
    will hand out carnations and release hundreds of pigeons as a symbol
    of peace. Mr. Dink once said, "I may see myself as frightened as a
    pigeon, but I know that in this country people do not touch pigeons."

    The procession is expected to advance for about a mile before the
    body is driven across the Golden Horn to the Kumkapi district for a
    Christian funeral Mass at the Church of the Virgin Mary. Among the
    Turkish government officials expected to attend the Mass are the
    interior minister, Abdulkadir Aksu, and the deputy prime minister,
    Mehmet Ali Sahin. Burial is to follow at the Balikli Armenian Cemetery.

    Most Armenian Turks live in Istanbul, the diverse and cosmopolitan
    center of Turkey. But the antinationalist demonstrations that followed
    Mr. Dink's killing also surfaced in places as diverse as Izmir, the
    Aegean coastal city that is Turkey's third largest, and in Sanliurfa
    and Hatay, which are close to Turkey's eastern border with Syria.

    "Public opinion in both countries, weary of the years-long conflict,
    had reached a point of explosion," said Kaan Soyak, a director of the
    Turkish-Armenian Business Development Commission, the only bilateral
    trade council of Turkish and Armenian executives. "That's what lies
    behind the massive outpouring for Mr. Dink."

    Ethnic Armenian Turks, like Jewish and Greek Turks, are an officially
    recognized minority group and as such are allowed to operate their
    own schools. Mr. Dink, for example, attended Armenian schools in
    Istanbul until entering a state-run university.

    Mr. Dink was labeled as a target among nationalist groups on their
    Web sites. Mr. Samast, the suspect, read and was influenced by those
    postings, according to the Anatolian news agency.

    Seven other suspects were also being detained over the weekend,
    including Yasin Hayal, who served 11 months in jail for the bombing
    of a McDonald's restaurant in Trabzon in 2004.

    Mr. Hayal, a known nationalist, is suspected of having a history of
    Islamic militant activity. He attempted to join the rebels in Chechnya
    but was turned away at the border, his former lawyer, Fatih Cakir,
    said by telephone on Sunday.

    Havva Samast, Mr. Samast's mother, knew that her son and Mr. Hayal
    were friends.

    "I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw him on television and had a
    shock," she said during a televised interview with the Dogan News
    Agency from her and her son's home city of Trabzon. "He couldn't have
    done this on his own. I know that he was friends with" Mr. Hayal.

    But many here still blame Article 301 for Mr. Dink's death and see
    it as an obstacle to freedom of speech in Turkey.
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