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Backgrounder: Armenian Editor Murder Trial Raises Key Issues In Turk

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  • Backgrounder: Armenian Editor Murder Trial Raises Key Issues In Turk

    BACKGROUNDER: ARMENIAN EDITOR MURDER TRIAL RAISES KEY ISSUES IN TURKEY

    BBC Monitoring research
    29 Jun 07

    Backgrounder by Lewis Macleod of BBC Monitoring on 29 June

    The trial of 18 accused in the murder in January 2007 of Hrant Dink,
    a Turkish journalist of Armenian descent, has become a focus for the
    often troubled issue of Turkish-Armenian relations.

    The trial begins on 2 July and the indictment calls for life sentences
    for two alleged ringleaders and 18-24 years in jail for the 17-year-old
    accused of carrying out the shooting.

    Issues

    The issues raised by Dink's death and the upcoming trial of those
    accused of killing him are critical for Turkey's future. Damage to
    Turkey's long-standing application to join the EU and its reputation
    as a Muslim majority country that is both secular and democratic are
    thought to be among the potential consequences.

    New French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said that he sees no place
    in Europe for Turkey and advocates a form of partnership instead.

    Pressure groups such as the New York-based Committee to Protect
    Journalists condemned the assassination as an affront to press freedom,
    while others saw the killing as a warning to minority groups in Turkey,
    whose Armenian community numbers around 60,000.

    Article 301

    Dink was the editor of Agos, an Istanbul-based newspaper, which
    despite its small print run had an influence far in excess of its
    circulation of around 6,000.

    Despite being regarded as an Armenian champion in Turkey, Dink always
    stressed that the country had to move on from what he called the
    "1915-metre deep well" of relations between Armenia and Turkey which
    derive from Ottoman-era allegations over massacres in that year of
    Christian Armenians by Muslim Turks.

    Dink argued that a secular approach was needed that was in keeping
    with both countries' aspirations to join the EU and a more modern
    liberal approach. He also spoke out for women's rights and the rights
    of the Kurdish minority in Turkey. By publishing Agos in both Turkish
    and Armenian, the only paper in Turkey to do so, Dink had sought
    to open a channel of communication to Turkish society at large and
    encourage dialogue.

    But he was put on trial and found guilty for "insulting Turkishness"
    in 2005. Dink was given a six-month suspended sentence, which he
    called a "bad joke". Article 301 of Turkey's Penal Code makes it a
    crime to insult Turkish identity in a country where nationalism is
    a strong political undercurrent.

    At his trial, ultra-nationalist Turks demonstrated outside the
    courtroom, and Dink said that his computer was full of death
    threats. Dink had appealed to the European Court of Human Rights
    in Strasbourg on the grounds that Article 301 was discriminatory
    and in violation of citizens' rights to freedom of expression. With
    his assassination on 19 January 2007 outside the offices of Agos,
    the case was closed.

    Reaction to killing

    Reaction to the killing was profound. Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayip Erdogan said: "The dark hands that killed him will be found
    and punished", condemning the assassination as an attack on Turkey's
    unity. President Ahmet Necdat Sezer spoke out strongly against
    "this ugly and shameful act". The Turkish Foreign Ministry in a
    statement "offered condolences to the people of Turkey, its press,
    and particularly to the Armenian community and Dink's family".

    The leading Hurriyet daily said "the murderer is a traitor" and
    Milliyet said "it was Turkey that was shot dead". Many newspapers
    blamed the killing on the nationalist atmosphere created by the media
    around Dink's trial. Over 100,000 people attended his funeral, some
    chanting "we are all Armenian, we are all Hrant Dink," according to
    the BBC.

    The trial will again highlight the troubled relations between Turkey
    and Armenia in the international arena, and place issues such as
    the rule of law, tolerance and the treatment of minorities under
    renewed scrutiny.
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