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A Death In Istanbul

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  • A Death In Istanbul

    Hartford Courant, CT
    Jan 26 2007

    A Death In Istanbul

    January 26, 2007

    Free speech is a concept Americans take for granted, but it is a
    precious commodity in many parts of the world.

    That sad fact has been demonstrated once again by the murder of Hrant
    Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist whose "crime" was to stand by his
    beliefs.

    Mr. Dink was a staunch defender of free speech. He had been
    prosecuted, like so many others before him, for "insulting
    Turkishness" by speaking out against a law, Article 301 of the
    Turkish penal code, often used to stifle free expression.

    Mr. Dink, 52, who was editor of Agos, an Armenian-language newspaper,
    had been criticized for his views on the massacre of 1.5 million
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War I. He worked for human
    rights and for reconciliation between Christian Armenians and Turkish
    Muslims. He was the 19th Turkish journalist in the past 15 years to
    be killed because of his work, according to the Committee to Protect
    Journalists.

    Too many writers and intellectuals have been prosecuted under Article
    301 for speaking their minds. Shortly after the editor received a
    six-month suspended jail sentence, he was shot down on the street in
    front of his office in Istanbul. Five Turks have been charged in the
    murder, allegedly carried out by Ogun Samast, a 17-year-old who is
    suspected of being a member of a militant group.

    This is an abomination on so many levels, not the least of which is
    the twisted influence on a boy so young.

    Ironically, Mr. Dink declared, when sentenced last fall, that his
    persecution had a positive effect because it had forced a national
    debate on what it means to be a democracy. Indeed, thousands turned
    out for his funeral and demonstrations took place around the world.

    His killing has led to a call for a change in the law and some
    conciliatory gestures between historic enemies. The unfettered right
    to speak the truth without fear of reprisal would be a fitting
    tribute to a martyr who paid the highest price to defend it.
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