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ANKARA: Thousands mourn Hrant Dink's death

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  • ANKARA: Thousands mourn Hrant Dink's death

    Voices Weekly, Turkey
    Jan 26 2007

    Thousands mourn Hrant Dink's death
    Posted on Cuma, Ocak 26 @ 21:37:03 EET by editor


    THE cold-blooded assassination of Armenian journlist Hrant Dink in
    Istanbul caused shockwaves around the world. His murder caused a wave
    of outrage in Armenia, with calls for a new dialogue between the
    countries.

    Turkey itself has been shocked by the assassination. Tens of
    thousands of people attended his funeral on January 23. Dink, an
    ethnic Armenian and a Turkish citizen, had done much to encourage
    dialogue between Armenians and Turks on difficult historical issues.
    Many carried placards reading "We are all Hrant Dink." Turkey's prime
    minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Thursday paid a personal call to the
    family of Hrant Dink. Erdogan stayed over one hour at Dink's home to
    pay his respects - far longer than his scheduled visit of 20 minutes.
    He then visited Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II to extend his
    condolences over Dink's killing. Dink was murdered on January 19, but
    the next day, Turkish police arrested a teenager identified as Ogun
    Samast from the eastern city of Trabzon. Samast is reported to have
    confessed to the crime and said that he was motivated by reports that
    Dink had said that "Turkish blood is dirty." Armenian President
    Robert Kocharian offered his condolences to Hrant Dink's family and
    friends, saying, "The murder of a famous journalist in Turkey is
    deeply reprehensible." All the churches of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church held requiems for Dink, and political, cultural and
    journalistic circles all expressed shock. Dink had worked as
    editor-in-chief of the bilingual Armenian-Turkish newspaper Agos in
    Istanbul since 1996. He had been charged several times under the
    controversial article 301 of Turkey's penal code, "insulting
    Turkishness." Dink trod a careful line, expressing loyalty to Turkey
    while asserting his right to a distinct Armenian identity. Armenia
    and Turkey have no diplomatic relations and their common border has
    been closed ever since Turkey shut it in April 1993, when Armenian
    forces occupied the Azerbaijani district of Kelbajar during the war
    over Nagorny Karabakh. However, a lot of business still goes on
    between the two countries, mainly via Georgia. Some estimates suggest
    that 30,000 Armenian citizens have temporary jobs in Turkey. Most
    experts agree that the murder marks a critical point in
    Armenian-Turkish relations and that the way the issue is handled will
    be important. American-Armenian analyst Richard Giragosian said: "It
    is not the murder of Hrant Dink that is now a challenge to the
    Turkish state; it is the way the Turkish authorities handle the
    impact of his death that is most important."

    http://www.voicesnewspaper.com/modules.php?name= News&file=article&sid=449
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