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  • Death in Istanbul

    Death in Istanbul
    Editorial

    FT
    January 25 2007 02:00

    The assassination last Friday of Hrant Dink, the editor of a
    bilingual Armenian-Turkish newspaper, called forth a howl of outrage
    on the streets of Istanbul, as 100,000 mourners at his funeral cried
    "we are all Armenians" or "we are all Hrant Dink". A teenager who
    admits to the crime and has ties to Turkey's violent ultranationalist
    fringe has been caught. What Turkey now needs, especially if it is to
    remain a credible candidate for membership of the European Union, is
    a ruthless examination of the poisonous backdrop to this killing. Mr
    Dink's murderer did not emerge from nowhere.

    The impasse in Turkey's EU accession talks has whipped up xenophobia.
    Brussels says that despite major reforms to entrench human, democratic
    and minority rights, Ankara has not done enough to protect freedom
    of expression or subordinate the army to civilian control. Turkey's
    neo-Islamist government says the Europeans are acting in bad faith,
    raising the bar to entry ever higher to pander to anti-Muslim
    prejudice, particularly in France, Germany and Austria.

    Both are right. But there are, nevertheless, rightly unalterable
    membership criteria. No country with a penal code that makes it a crime
    to "denigrate Turkishness" (Article 301) will meet them. European
    membership is also inconceivable while Turkey refuses to face up to
    the mass murders of Armenians as the Ottoman empire crumbled during
    the first world war.

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, has called for reputable
    historians to establish the truth, confident this would place the
    killings within a conflict in which millions of Turks also perished
    as western powers dismembered Ottoman territory.

    Yet for generations there has been nothing but silence or denial. Rare
    conferences to discuss these terrible events have been cancelled after
    pressure from the army-dominated nationalist establishment. Turkey
    closed its borders with Armenia in 1993.

    Critically, nationalist cabals have used Article 301 to silence writers
    and intellectuals who have dared to raise the Armenian tragedy and ask
    whether it was centrally directed genocide. Mr Dink himself was given
    a suspended jail sentence and Orhan Pamuk, the Nobel prize-winning
    novelist was also dragged to
    court (where yesterday he was publicly threatened by a well-known
    extremist
    who prosecutors say provided the gun that killed Mr Dink).

    Mr Erdogan has reacted forcibly to the murder and made gestures of
    reconciliation towards the Armenians. It is unrealistic to expect
    more ahead of fiercely contested elections this year.

    But Turkey must demonstrate its commitment to free speech by repealing
    Article 301, not only a mechanism for exacerbating ultranationalism
    but evidently an incitement to murder too. Once the elections are
    over, Turks and Armenians need to move towards a public reckoning
    with history.
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