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Funeral of slain journalist triggers mass support for a more liberal

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  • Funeral of slain journalist triggers mass support for a more liberal

    Funeral of slain journalist triggers mass support for a more liberal Turkey
    By BENJAMIN HARVEY, Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    January 23, 2007 Tuesday 6:33 PM GMT

    More than 100,000 people marched in a funeral procession Tuesday for a
    slain ethnic Armenian journalist who had angered Turkish nationalists
    suggesting the grieving for Hrant Dink may become a catalyst for
    liberal values and overcoming a century of antagonism between Turks
    and Armenians.

    "We are all Armenians" chanted mourners in an extraordinary outpouring
    of affection for a journalist who had made enemies by calling the mass
    killings of Armenians toward the end of the Ottoman Empire genocide.

    Dink was gunned down outside his newspaper Agos in broad daylight on
    Friday. The murder triggered a period of intense introspection and
    touched off debate about excessive nationalism, free expression and
    the ability of Turks of different ethnic backgrounds to live together.

    Throngs of mourners marched along the eight-kilometer (five-mile) route
    from the offices of Dink's newspaper, Agos, to an Armenian Orthodox
    church virtually shutting down the center of this massive city. Many
    participants carried placards that read: "We are all Hrant Dinks."

    Marchers took time off from work and school to join the procession,
    and thousands leaned out of their office windows to applaud, weep
    and throw flowers as the black hearse carrying Dink's body passed by.

    Despite a request from his family not to turn the funeral into a
    protest, many also raised their fists at times shouting: "Shoulder
    to shoulder against fascism" and "Murderer 301" a reference to the
    freedom-curbing Turkish law that was used to prosecute Dink and others
    on charges of "insulting Turkishness."

    The 52-year-old journalist's daughter, Sera, carrying a framed portrait
    of her father, wept as she walked in front of the coffin.

    Dink, the editor of the bilingual Armenian-Turkish newspaper, sought
    to encourage reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia. But he chose
    a dangerous path by making public statements about the mass killings
    of Armenians by Turks in the early 20th century remarks that landed
    him in court and prompted death threats.

    Comments on that tumultuous period of Turkish history have gotten
    several of the country's most famous thinkers dragged to court.

    Among them was novelist Orhan Pamuk, who last year won the Nobel Prize
    in literature. The prosecutions have alarmed the European Union which
    is considering Turkey's bid to join but until Tuesday there were few
    mass rallies in favor of freedom of speech in Turkey itself.

    It was not clear how much momentum the liberal outpouring could
    gather. But some believe that if it continues, the implications for
    democratic movements in the Islamic world where protests against
    terrorism and other acts of violence have been muted could be
    significant.

    Police were questioning seven suspects, including a teenager, Ogun
    Samast, who authorities said has confessed to shooting Dink, and Yasin
    Hayal, a nationalist militant convicted in a 2004 bomb attack at a
    McDonald's restaurant. Hayal has confessed to inciting the slaying
    and providing a gun and money to the teenager, according to police.

    The suspects also include a university student who allegedly "inspired"
    the attack, Hurriyet newspaper reported Tuesday. Police confirmed the
    report but gave no details. A firm motive has yet to be established,
    but many believe Dink was killed for expressing his views.

    Dink, one of the most important voices in Turkey's ethnic Armenian
    community, insisted he wanted reconciliation between the two peoples.

    "I had no intention of insulting Turkishness," he told The Associated
    Press in a telephone interview months before his death. "My only
    concern is to improve Armenian and Turkish relations."

    He seemed to have achieved that to a certain extent in his death:
    Turkey has no diplomatic ties with Armenia but still invited Armenian
    officials and religious leaders as well as moderate members of
    the diaspora to the funeral. Armenia sent Deputy Foreign Minister
    Arman Kirakosian. The Armenian Orthodox Church sent U.S-based Bishop
    Khazkah Parsamian. "Hrant Dink was a great advocate in the country
    for freedom of speech and for reconciliation, in particular between
    Armenians and Turks," Ross Wilson, the U.S. ambassador to Turkey,
    told The Associated Press on the sidelines of the funeral procession.

    "Judging by what you see on the streets, he did bring the people
    together," he said.

    In an emotional speech to the crowd in front of the Agos office, Dink's
    wife, Rakel, called for a deeper search for answers to the killing.

    "Seventeen or 27, whoever he was, the murderer was once a baby,"
    she said. "Unless we can question the darkness that turned this baby
    into a murderer, we cannot achieve anything."

    In a religious service attended by Armenians and Turks including Deputy
    Prime Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin and Interior Minister Abdulkadir Aksu
    Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II called for expanded freedoms of speech
    and more dialogue between Turks and Armenians.

    "It is mystical that his funeral turned into an occasion where Armenian
    and Turkish officials gathered together. He would have been happy to
    see this turn into real dialogue," Mesrob said, weeping during part
    of his eulogy.

    Dink was laid to rest at Istanbul's Balikli Armenian Cemetery, where
    priests chanted in Armenian and mourners applauded as his portrait
    was displayed and white doves were released.

    "It was an attack against all of us," said Oya Basaran, 52, a school
    principal. "We want to live together as brothers. We want to give
    the message to the world that the killing does not represent us."

    In the Armenian capital, Yerevan, several thousand people gathered
    in a square in the Armenian capital, Yerevan, holding ironic placards
    reading: "Turkey, This Is Your Path to Europe?"

    Many later walked to Yerevan's massive monuments to the victims
    of the World War I-era mass killings of Armenians, placing Dink's
    portrait there.

    Associated Press writers Suzan Fraser and Selcan Hacaoglu in Ankara
    and Avet Demourian in Yerevan, Armenia, contributed to this report.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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