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  • Turkey reminded of genocide issue

    Whittier Daily News, CA
    Pasadena Star-News, CA
    Jan 26 2007


    Turkey reminded of genocide issue


    HRANT Dink paid the ultimate price for speaking the truth. Last
    Friday, the newspaper editor was shot to death outside his office in
    Istanbul, Turkey.

    The 17-year-old Turk who is under arrest for the murder told police,
    in his initial interrogation, that he had read some of Dink's
    writings on the Internet, and that he was angered by them: "These
    things bothered me. I decided to kill him. ... I would do it again
    today. I am not sorry."

    Dink's crime: The Armenian journalist wrote about the genocide waged
    against Armenians by the Turkish government 80 years ago. Around 1.5
    million men, women and children perished in that carnage, some from
    malnutrition, others from the brutal conditions of forced marches.
    Many were simply shot or hanged.

    And the present-day Turkish government continues to deny that it
    happened.

    The U.S. government for decades has abetted that lie by refusing to
    recognize that genocide took place. Both are wrong, and both should
    change their policies accordingly.

    Dink was no stranger to repression. He was convicted in 2005 of
    insulting Turkishness - a crime in Turkey - for speaking publicly
    about the genocide. Family and friends said he had been receiving
    threats ever since his trial.

    Turkish intransigence over the matter of calling the genocide what it
    was continues to puzzle. The current government is not the one that
    organized and implemented the killings. To be sure, the episode is a
    serious blight on Turkey's past. But consider the example of Germany,
    where far greater crimes - in sheer number of victims - were
    committed against Jews and others during the Holocaust.

    The Germans have worked assiduously, as individuals and through their
    government, to make amends for those crimes. They acknowledged them,
    and have paid huge sums of money to the survivors. In addition, they
    have memorialized the Holocaust, helping to ensure that its lessons
    are not forgotten.

    Turkey wishes to join the European Union, but faces enormous
    opposition from powerful members of that group, especially France,
    over its refusal to come to terms with its own history. Yet the
    denial persists.

    But perhaps not forever. Though still small in number, some Turks are
    calling openly for acknowledgment and the beginning of redemption.

    And when police took Ogun Samast, the suspected killer, to the scene
    of the murder, a small crowd of onlookers shouted at the suspect,
    "We're all Hrants. We're all Armenians!" according to the Anatolia
    news agency.

    Let's hope that attitude spreads.

    The Fresno Bee
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