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  • Suspect in Journalist Death Makes Threat

    Suspect in Journalist Death Makes Threat
    By BENJAMIN HARVEY

    Wednesday January 24, 2007 2:46 PM
    Associated Press Writer

    ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) - A man who confessed to inciting the murder
    of a prominent journalist shouted what appeared to be a threat
    against another leading Turkish intellectual on Wednesday, the Nobel
    Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk.

    "Orhan Pamuk, be smart! Be smart!" Yasin Hayal shouted as he was
    being brought to an Istanbul courtroom with his hands cuffed behind
    his back. Police quickly pressed Hayal's head down to silence him
    and led him away.

    Hayal, a militant nationalist who served time in prison for a 2004 bomb
    attack, confessed to inciting last week's slaying of the influential
    ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink and to providing a gun and
    money to the alleged killer, police said.

    Hayal allegedly told the killer that Dink, who angered nationalists
    by calling the mass killing of Armenians in the early 20th century
    genocide, was "a traitor to his country who insults Turks."

    The suspected triggerman, a teenager named Ogun Samast, confessed to
    shooting Dink in a four-page statement given to prosecutors Wednesday,
    and was formally charged with the murder, the state-run Anatolia news
    agency reported.

    Samast told police Hayal gave him money and a picture of the journalist
    that he carried with him for several months, the news agency reported.

    Dink, editor of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, had been
    brought to trial numerous times for allegedly "insulting Turkishness,"
    a crime under the notorious Article 301 of Turkey's penal code.

    Like Dink, Pamuk also faced trial in Turkey for commenting on the
    killings of Armenians and had been accused of treason for doing so.
    And like Dink, he said he received death threats and considered
    leaving the country because of them.

    Pamuk's case was thrown out on a technicality, and he went on to win
    the Nobel Prize in literature last year. He was the first Turk to
    do so.

    Dink's murder inspired an outpouring of support for liberal values,
    including freedom of expression, tolerance and reconciliation between
    Armenians and Turks, with more than 100,000 people marching in his
    funeral procession on Tuesday.

    But Hayal's comments raised fears that Turkey may continue to be a
    dangerous place for intellectuals who openly express their ideas.

    Most Turks suspect that the killer - who as a teenager will likely
    receive a lessened prison sentence if convicted - may have ties to
    ultra-nationalist groups.

    Dink himself had said that he was being threatened by elements of the
    "deep state," a term for a shadowy network inside the Turkish military,
    intelligence and political circles that is believed to use clandestine
    methods to defend the state against perceived threats.

    Amid a period of national introspection, Dink's family has called on
    Turks to look at how they have permitted the creation of an atmosphere
    that led to his killing.

    Interior Minister Abdulkadir Aksu said the crime was carried out by
    "circles who do not want Turkey to develop and reach the level of
    prosperous and modern countries." Aksu condemned the attack, saying
    it had no justification and was being "investigated in great detail."
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