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TIME: Editor's Death Spotlights Turkish Nationalism

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  • TIME: Editor's Death Spotlights Turkish Nationalism

    TIME MAgazine
    Jan 24 2007

    Editor's Death Spotlights Turkish Nationalism
    Tuesday, Jan. 23, 2007 By PELIN TURGUT/ISTANBUL Article


    ToolsPrintEmailReprints The murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist
    Hrant Dink has put Turkish nationalism in the spotlight. The suspect,
    17-year-old Ogun Samast, was quoted by newspapers as telling police
    he shot Dink because the journalist insulted the Turkish nation.
    Local papers are reporting that Samast was allegedly linked to a
    small ultranationalist group in his hometown, Trabzon, on the Black
    Sea Coast. "Those who created nationalist sentiment in Turkey have
    fed such a monster that there are many youngsters on the streets who
    do not find the ... state nationalist enough and are ready to take
    the law into their own hands," wrote Ismet Berkan in his daily column
    in Radikal, one of Turkey's main dailies.

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    Nationalism in Turkey has been fueled in recent years by the lukewarm
    reception of Turkey's bid for membership in the European Union. Many
    in Europe have voiced misgivings over embracing the populous, mostly
    Muslim (although officially secular) country. The accession process,
    which began with great optimism in 2004, has slowed significantly in
    recent months. With Europe appearing ever distant, ambitious
    politicians on all sides have stepped up their nationalist,
    ethnocentric rhetoric ahead of elections slated for November this
    year. The country's right-wing parties especially have gained
    strength. So much so that even traditional leftist organizations like
    the Republican People's Party are campaigning on a nationalist
    program. Its leader Deniz Baykal has spoken out against the European
    Union and legislation for religious minorities. He has even opposed
    lifting an anti-free speech law under which Dink and Nobel
    prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk were prosecuted.

    The E.U. wants Turkey to abolish that law, Article 301, which is used
    by nationalist prosecutors and lawyers to charge writers and
    journalists with "insulting Turkishness." At Dink's funeral today,
    many in the procession carried posters that read "301 is the real
    killer." "His murder has started some soul-searching," says Hakan
    Altinay, director of the Open Society Institute in Turkey. "Turks
    need to look at themselves and ask how they could have bred the
    xenophobia and paranoia that would lead a kid to do this. Everyone
    has some degree of responsibility here."

    Dink, 52, a widely respected journalist and editor of Agos, a Turkish
    and Armenian newspaper, was gunned down in front of his office in
    central Istanbul on Friday. He had been branded a "traitor" by
    nationalists for his comments on the mass deaths of Armenians in the
    then Ottoman Empire during World War I. Hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians died in 1915, in what many Armenians - like Dink - say was
    systematic policy. Turkey denies any claim of genocide and says the
    deaths were part of a partisan conflict in which thousands of Turks
    were also killed.

    But Dink's murder may yet serve as a wake-up call. Since Friday, tens
    of thousands of people have flocked to his newspaper offices to pay
    their respects, many chanting slogans like "We are all Armenians." On
    Tuesday, thousands filled the streets to pay homage to Dink, carrying
    the same signs. "Everybody here feels responsible," said Ayse Sivri,
    a 21-year-old student. "We all saw this coming, but nobody did
    anything to prevent it."
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