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  • Baby steps for democracy

    The Calgary Herald (Alberta)
    January 28, 2007 Sunday
    Final Edition

    Baby steps for democracy

    The Turkish response to the assassination of writer Hrant Dink has
    been encouraging.

    "We are all Hrant Dink," said the protesters' signs. It looks as if
    the people of Turkey are ready to defend their freedom.

    There is little doubt Hrant Dink was killed because of his opinions.

    He was shot to death on Jan. 19 in Istanbul. He was the editor of a
    Turkish-Armenian newspaper, who spoke his mind about the 1915
    massacres of Armenians.

    The Turkish authorities have arrested a 17-year-old and say they
    suspect the teenager was incited by nationalist militants.

    Turkey has yet to come to terms with its history, and there is
    tension between ethnic Armenians and ethnic Turks. In such a climate,
    one might have expected the assassination of a prominent advocate to
    inflame sectarian divisions.

    That hasn't happened. There have been large and peaceful protests.
    Non-Armenians carried signs that read, "We are all Armenian." Crowd
    estimates from Dink's funeral procession have been 100,000 mourners.

    This is an encouraging sign that the people of Turkey want to live in
    a secular, pluralist and free society. As for the Turkish government,
    the signs are not as clear. Despite the official display of mourning,
    it must not be forgotten that Turkish law makes it a crime to
    "insult" Turkey and its national character.

    This law has led to charges against several writers, including Dink.
    It may have been a misguided teenager who shot him, but it is the
    government that is willing to send writers to jail for using the word
    "genocide" in the context of the Armenian massacres.

    When Turkish police brought a nationalist into a courtroom to face
    charges in the Dink case, he yelled that Orhan Pamuk had better watch
    out. Pamuk is the Turkish writer who won the 2006 Nobel literary
    prize. He, too, has been charged with insulting Turkishness, although
    his case was thrown out on a technicality. The state is sending mixed
    signals to nationalist zealots.

    Turkey's policy of harassing its best writers is an embarrassment to
    a country that wants to be seen as worthy of inclusion in the
    European Union.

    Most writers, and especially journalists, work to keep governments
    accountable. In return, citizens will pressure their governments to
    respect the press. In China, outcry over a journalist beaten to death
    at a coal mine has caused President Hu Jintao to become personally
    involved in the investigation.

    Canadian Journalists for Free Expression puts the number of
    journalists killed last year at 82 and calls 2006 the most deadly
    year on record for journalists.

    Freedom of expression is the first freedom; without it, Turkey cannot
    reach its potential.
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