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  • ANKARA: Slain journalist commemorated in Washington

    Turkish Daily News, Turkey
    Jan 25 2007

    Slain journalist commemorated in Washington

    Dink's vision for a better world came true when tens of thousands
    displayed solidarity at his funeral, US official says

    UMİT ENGINSOY
    WASHINGTON - Turkish Daily News

    Washington's Armenian community mourned the assassinated journalist
    Hrant Dink at a memorial service on Tuesday night, as a senior U.S.

    official said that Dink's vision for a better world of dialogue and
    reconciliation had come true when tens of thousands of marchers at
    his funeral displayed solidarity with his views.

    Bishop Vicken Aykazian, legate of the Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church of America (Eastern), presided over the memorial service at
    St. Mary's Armenian Apostolic Church. The Armenian Assembly of America
    (AAA), one of the largest U.S. Armenian groups, organized the event.

    Describing Dink as a man of courage, Dan Fried, assistant secretary of
    state for European and Eurasian affairs, said that the slain journalist
    insisted on reconciliation and dialogue in his work and life.

    "His was a vision of a better world," Fried said. "Tens of thousands of
    people, Armenians, Turks, Greeks, filled the streets and stated their
    solidarity with his vision... His vision was made a reality today."

    More than 100,000 mourners marched in Istanbul earlier on Tuesday
    in a funeral for Dink, who was gunned down outside the office of his
    newspaper, Agos, in Istanbul last week.

    Fried said that Dink's life came to an end "at the hands of an ignorant
    and hateful nationalist."

    Bishop Aykazian said Dink's murderers also attacked Armenia, Turkey
    and the advancement of Turkey into the European Union.

    "Hrant Dink called upon the world, and Turkey in particular, to
    acknowledge and admit the truth of the Armenian genocide in Ottoman
    Turkey - not to shame or humiliate the Turkish people, but to engage
    our two neighboring peoples in a fruitful dialogue for the betterment
    of relations," Aykazian said.

    "For a nation to deny its history, no matter at times how dark,
    is to deny itself," the bishop added.

    AAA's executive director Brian Ardouny blamed "a climate of
    intolerance, prejudice and repression" in Turkey, "which precipitated
    this crime."

    "Sadly, 92 years after the beginning of the Armenian genocide, Hrant
    Dink is the latest victim of Turkey's inexcusable campaign of denial,"
    he said.

    Dink had stood trial several times for his public comments on the
    genocide, and was convicted last year for "insulting Turkishness"
    under a much criticized article in the penal code. He received a
    six-month suspended sentence.

    In a related development, a fresh resolution formally recognizing
    World War I-era killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as
    genocide will be introduced at the U.S. House of Representatives,
    Armenian sources said.

    Pro-Armenian lawmakers sponsoring the resolution originally had
    planned to introduce it last week, but then delayed the procedural
    move in an effort to maximize the number of legislators backing the
    measure in writing, analysts said. The House is expected to discuss
    and probably vote the resolution within the next few months.
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