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An ominous slaying of a Turkish journalist

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  • An ominous slaying of a Turkish journalist

    An ominous slaying of a Turkish journalist

    Allentown Morning Call, PA
    Jan 24 2007

    Last year was the worst on record for news media casualties, according
    to the International News Safety Institute: 167 journalists and 30
    other news-gathering personnel died while trying to do their jobs
    in 37 countries. The most recent, prominent example of a journalist
    deliberately attacked for exercising freedom of the press occurred on
    Friday in Istanbul, when Hrant Dink was shot dead outside the office
    of his bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly newspaper, Agos.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned the shooting:
    "A bullet was fired at freedom of thought and democratic life in
    Turkey." Several thousand people marched from Mr. Dink's newspaper
    office to Taksim Square on Friday to protest. By Sunday, Turkish
    news agencies reported the arrest of a teenage Turkish gunman who
    reportedly gave prosecutors an extensive confession. However, the
    teen might have been just a part of a conspiracy; at least 10 other
    suspects were arrested in connection with the killing.

    Lehigh Valley Local Links

    Mobile News | Subscribe Online | Order Reprints There are several
    complicated layers to this story, in addition to the loss of a
    journalist with the courage to speak his mind on controversial
    topics. Turkey has long refused to use the term "genocide" to describe
    the deaths of Armenians beginning in 1915. Mr. Dink counted himself
    among a growing number of Turks who want the government to admit that
    leaders of the Ottoman Empire had directed the slaughter of Armenians,
    and who want Turkey to become a full democracy.

    The death of Mr. Dink might mobilize his supporters, who seek the
    repeal of Article 301 of the Turkish penal code. Article 301 places
    restrictions on a free press. Mr. Dink was convicted in 2005 of
    insulting the Turkish identity in some of his articles and he received
    a six-month suspended prison sentence.

    Turkey must agree to a series of democratic reforms if it is to be
    allowed to join the European Union. European resistance to Turkish
    membership is growing, and the death of Mr. Dink will only fuel that
    fire. Ironically, Mr. Dink viewed entry into the European Union as
    the best way to strengthen democracy in Turkey.
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