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Armenian Community Anxious Since Day of Dink's Murder - R Hattechian

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  • Armenian Community Anxious Since Day of Dink's Murder - R Hattechian

    ARMENIAN COMMUNITY HAS BEEN ANXIOUS SINCE DAY OF HRANT DINK'S MURDER,
    ROBERT HATTECHIAN SAYS

    YEREVAN, JULY 5, NOYAN TAPAN. "The Armenian-Turkish relations had been
    improved in the past 10-15 years, there was a sympathy for the
    Armenians living in Constantinople, and writers and historians speaking
    about the Armenian Genocide more boldly had appeared in the Turkish
    media. It seemed to us that hatred for us had disappeared, but after
    Hrant Dink's murder such phenomena emerged, which reminded us that the
    things are not this way at all," writer, publicist Robert Hattechian,
    the editor-in-chief of the Marmara daily of Istanbul, stated in his
    interview to Noyan Tapan.

    In his words, thousands of people's taking to the streets and saying
    "We are Dinks, we are Armenians" after Hrant Dink's murder (at that,
    the number of Armenians was small among these people) did much harm to
    the Armenian community. R. Hattechian said that Armenian schools and
    churches are often threatened after that. "In the schools they have an
    atmosphere of fear, and iron doors and video cameras have been placed
    in front of editorial offices, as we are periodically warned that
    something may happen at any moment. Today the Armenian community is
    anxious, and everybody wishes to return to the days of past," R.
    Hattechian said.

    Touching upon the reopening of the repaired Surb Khach church of
    Akhtamar, R. Hattechian said that the opening of the church as a museum
    was a positive decision. "Of course, I would like it to be opened as a
    church, but if it were this way, then only Armenians of Turkey would
    visit it once a year, but now the whole world is interested in Surb
    Khach church," the editor-in-chief of the Marmara daily said. In his
    words, if more clergymen, scientists and intellectuals took part in the
    church's reopening, it would be a larger Armenian agitation.

    Speaking about the opening of the Armenian-Turkish border, R.
    Hattechian said that Turks, in particular, Turks living in Kars and
    Erzrum near Armenia, are for opening the border as soon as possible.
    However, in the words of Marmara's editor-in-chief, the border will not
    be opened easily, as the Turkish authorities still have to get over
    some obstacles, the first of which is the issue of the Genocide. "Of
    course, we will wait very long, but the opening of the border is not
    only for us, but for the Turkish public opinion," R. Hattechian said.
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