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Injustices continue after Turkish-Armenian editor's slaying

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  • Injustices continue after Turkish-Armenian editor's slaying

    Los Angeles Daily News
    Injustices continue after Turkish-Armenian editor's slaying
    BRIDGET JOHNSON, Columnist
    06/18/2007

    "HOW real are these threats? To be honest, it is impossible for me to know
    for sure," Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink wrote in his last column on
    Jan. 10. "...2007 will probably be an even harder year for me. The court
    cases will continue, new ones will be initiated and God knows what kind of
    additional injustices I will have to face."
    Nine days later, Dink was gunned down in broad daylight outside the Istanbul
    office of his weekly newspaper, Agos. At the time of his slaying,
    prosecutors were preparing the third instance of "denigrating Turkishness"
    charges against Dink; he'd previously been convicted once. Dink's "crime"
    was writing about the hotly contested and controversial subject of the
    Armenian Genocide.
    One can safely say that these prosecutions against Dink's free expression
    helped inflame the ire of Turkish nationalists. On July 2, 18
    ultra-nationalists go on trial in Dink's killing. The alleged trigger man,
    Ogun Samast, who faces various charges including "murder with premeditation"
    and "membership of a terrorist organization," reportedly quickly confessed,
    but the net grew much wider.
    Ultra-nationalists Erhan Tuncel, a university student, and Yasin Hayal, who
    served time for the 2004 bombing of a McDonald's, are charged with planning
    the crime and terrorist-group membership. But the slate of defendants
    reaches up into the political ranks, including Yasar Cihan, chairman of a
    localized branch of the Islamist-nationalist Great Unity Party, who is
    accused of giving money to Hayal after the shooting.
    Yet when Dink prophesized in that last column that additional injustices
    would arise, he could have been speaking not only of his cold-blooded
    killing but of the trials that would follow.
    First, it was revealed that hearings for his alleged assailants will be
    closed to the press, and journalists won't even be given reports of the
    trial. Reporters Without Borders states that this is because the alleged
    shooter, Samast, is 17 years old. How convenient for those who may be
    wanting to shield the extent of the currently 18-strong conspiracy - and
    what an ironic blow for the principles of press freedom for which Dink
    ultimately gave his life.
    And in a slap to all Armenians and all who value the democracy, free speech
    and justice ideals furthered by Hrant Dink, his son, Arat, now editor of
    Agos, has been charged with "insulting Turkish identity" and appeared in
    court last week.
    Arat Dink simply reprinted an interview where his father recognized the
    Armenian Genocide. For this, prosecutors are urging that Arat spend six
    months behind bars. "The most absurd and dangerous (thing) is the fact that
    describing a historical event as `genocide' is perceived as insulting
    Turkishness," Arat Dink said.
    Like father, like son, the charges fall under Article 301, which stipulates
    penalties of up to three years in prison for denigrating Turkishness or the
    government, and increases penalties by a third for such offenses committed
    by Turkish citizens in other countries. "If a reasonable proposal is made,
    we may work on it," Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in May
    of amending Article 301. The arrest of Arat Dink shows that this hollow
    promise is too little, too late.
    "Article 301 killed Hrant," Mehmet Ali Birand wrote in the Turkish Daily
    News back in January. "This is the reason why, if we would like to make a
    change as a society, we need to change Article 301. This is the only way we
    can ask for Hrant Dink's forgiveness."
    Turkey has a fleeting chance to ensure that justice is done for Dink and for
    all journalists who shouldn't have to live in fear of coming under the thumb
    of the government - and possibly staring down the chamber of an assassin's
    gun. Not only should transparency be paramount in the trial for the killers
    of Hrant Dink by granting full media access, but Article 301 charges should
    be immediately dropped against Arat Dink and other Agos staff members.
    As it stands now, things aren't getting any better. Agos staff have been
    threatened by the Turkish Vengeance Brigade, and the group threatened
    Istanbul-based Ozgur Radyo in March: "If you do not stop betraying Turkey,
    your end will be the same as the others. Your destiny will be the same as
    that of the other traitors."
    As Hrant Dink would say now, God knows what kind of additional injustices
    the Turkish media will have to face.
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