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  • Mourners flood Istanbul

    Kathimerini, Greece
    Jan 24 2007


    Mourners flood Istanbul
    Thousands remember slain Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink


    Reuters
    Thousands of people marched yesterday across the Unkapani bridge over
    the Golden Horn during the funeral procession of Turkish-Armenian
    editor Hrant Dink in Istanbul.

    By Daren Butler

    ISTANBUL - Up to 100,000 people filed silently through Istanbul
    yesterday behind the coffin of Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink,
    whose murder has stirred debate about the influence of hardline
    nationalism in Turkey. From early morning, tearful mourners, many
    holding identical black-and-white signs reading "We are all Hrant
    Dink" and "We are all Armenians," gathered outside the Agos newspaper
    office where Dink was shot three times in broad daylight last Friday.

    White doves were released into the air as somber music played. Much
    of downtown Istanbul, a sprawling city of some 12 million set on the
    Bosporus waterway, was closed to traffic.

    A 17-year-old youth, Ogun Samast, has confessed to killing Dink for
    "insulting" Turks. A nationalist militant friend of Samast has
    admitted inciting Samast to kill Dink, who had worked for
    reconciliation between Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks. "We are
    seeing off our brother with a silent walk, without slogans and
    without asking how a baby became a murderer," Dink's widow Rakel,
    surrounded by her three children, told mourners.

    Organizers estimated 100,000 mourners followed the black hearse and
    flower-covered coffin on its 8-kilometer (5-mile) journey across
    Istanbul and the Golden Horn waterway to an Armenian Orthodox church.
    Police said there were tens of thousands. "Seeing this mass of people
    gives me courage. There are lots of people against racism and
    nationalism," actress Lale Mansur said.

    Ministers, foreign diplomats, Armenian government officials and
    members of both Turkey's 60,000-strong Armenian community and the
    global Armenian diaspora joined the funeral service. "We still hope
    that (Turks)... will accept that the Armenians are Turkish citizens
    who have been living on this land for thousands of years and are not
    foreigners or potential enemies," Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II told
    the mourners. Dink was buried at the Balikli Armenian Cemetery.

    Dink, like dozens of other intellectuals including Nobel Literature
    Laureate Orhan Pamuk, had been prosecuted for his views on the
    massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks in 1915. Turkish
    nationalists, including senior politicians, see intellectuals' calls
    for Turkey to own up to its role in the massacres as a threat to
    national security and honour. "This (murder) is not an exceptional
    case but the result of a poisonous nationalist atmosphere. Turkey's
    credibility abroad has hit rock bottom," said Vural Oger, a leading
    Turkish-German businessman and politician.
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