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Al Jazeera: Thousands attend Dink funeral

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  • Al Jazeera: Thousands attend Dink funeral

    Thousands attend Dink funeral

    23 Jan 07
    _http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/F70690D 7-38BE-4097-A008-CFBF3776310D.h
    tm_
    (http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/F70690D7- 38BE-4097-A008-CFBF3776310D.htm)

    Mourners held identical black-and-white signs reading "We are all
    Hrant Dink" [AP]

    The body of Hrant Dink, the Turkish Armenian editor killed last
    Friday, has been transported across Istanbul to an Armenian church,
    where the writer is to be buried.

    Thousands of people filed through Istanbul behind the coffin on Tuesday
    and mourners at the church broke into applause at the arrival of the
    hearse carrying Dink's coffin.

    Despite a request from his family not to turn the funeral into
    a protest, some mourners shouted: "Shoulder to shoulder against
    fascism" and "Murderer 301" - referring to the the Turkish law that
    had been used to prosecute Dink and others on charges of "insulting
    Turkishness".

    Earlier in the day mourners gathered outside the Agos newspaper office,
    where Dink was shot, holding identical black-and-white signs reading
    "We are all Hrant Dink" and "We are all Armenians".

    Rakel, Dink's widow, told thousands of mourners: "We are seeing off
    our brother with a silent walk, without slogans and without asking
    how a baby became a murderer."

    White doves were released into the air and much of downtown Istanbul
    was closed to traffic.

    The funeral took place amid tight security as those following the
    hearse walked the 8km distance from the Agos headquarters to the
    church where Dink was to be burried.

    Turkish media has criticised top politicians and armed forces chiefs
    for not attending the funeral.

    Cengiz Candar, a columnist in a Turkish newspaper, wrote: "If the
    president, the prime minister and chief of the general staff came to
    the funeral, I would be hopeful the state has given up on a lynching
    culture and started to [practice] self-criticism."

    "We especially belittle our minorities. We do not consider our citizens
    of diverse ethnic groups as one of our own. We hate different points
    of view"

    Mehmet Ali Birand, Turkish commentator

    Dink's murder has stirred debate about nationalism in Turkey and has
    been viewed with concern abroad, especially by the Armenian diaspora.

    Police say Ogun Samast, a seventeen-year-old, has confessed to killing
    Dink for "insulting" Turks and that Yasin Hayal, a friend of Samast,
    has admitted that he incited Samast to kill Dink.

    Samast is one of seven people allegedly in custody in connection with
    Dink's murder.

    Aykut Cengiz Engin, Istanbul's chief prosecutor, has said that
    investigators have found no link between Friday's murder and "known
    ideological or separatist" illegal organisations, but added: "... we
    are investigating in detail the possibility that it was carried out
    by an organisation".

    Article 301

    Dink had been prosecuted for his views on the massacres of Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks in 1915, which he called genocide.

    He was given a suspended six-month jail sentence, under "Article 301",
    last year for "insulting Turkishness".

    Other writers and intellectuals in Turkey who have expressed the
    view that Turkey should "face up" to its role in the massacres of
    Armenians have come under similar criticism from nationalists.

    Mehmet Ali Birand, a Turkish commentator, said: "We are all responsible
    [for Dink's murder]. We especially belittle our minorities. We do not
    consider our citizens of diverse ethnic groups as one of our own. We
    hate different points of view."

    In recent years Turkey has undergone a number of reforms aimed at
    preparing the country for EU membership.

    A more liberal attitude to national minorities is one of the demands
    made on Turkey by the EU.

    Turkey denies claims that 1.5 million Armenians died in a genocide
    at Ottoman Turkish hands, instead saying simply that large numbers
    of both Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks perished.

    But many foreign parliaments have passed laws recognising the massacres
    as genocide.
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