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Turkish Shooting Suspect Says His Target Was Armenian Patriarch

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  • Turkish Shooting Suspect Says His Target Was Armenian Patriarch

    TURKISH SHOOTING SUSPECT SAYS HIS TARGET WAS ARMENIAN PATRIARCH

    Agence France Presse -- English
    March 7, 2007 Wednesday 5:24 PM GMT

    A Turkish man accused of firing in the air outside an Armenian church
    claimed Wednesday his real target had been Patriarch Mesrob II, the
    spiritual leader of the tiny Armenian community, the Anatolia news
    agency reported.

    "I had prepared it for (Mesrob) Mutafyan II," Volkan Karova shouted
    to reporters here as he and fellow suspect Yilmaz Can Ozalp were
    being escorted to the prosecutor's office to give their testimony,
    the agency reported.

    It was not clear whether he had intended to physically attack the
    patriarch or scare him.

    Later Wednesday, a court charged the two men with "threatening by
    firing shots" and "carrying an unlicensed gun" and sent them to jail
    pending trial, the agency said.

    The pair had been arrested late Sunday just hours after two men fired
    a shot in the air outside a church in the city's Kumkapi district.

    At the time, a ceremony was being held there for slain ethnic Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink.

    The ceremony at the church, on the European side of Istanbul, was to
    mark the 40th day since Dink, the 52-year-old ethnic Armenian editor
    of the bilingual Agos weekly, was shot dead outside his office.

    It was led by Patriarch Mesrob II, who represents the 80,000 Armenians
    in Turkey.

    Anxiety has engulfed the Armenian community and intellectuals since
    Dink's murder on Januray 19, and in recent interviews Mesrob II has
    said that his office had been receiving threats.

    Dink had angered nationalist circles and the courts for describing
    the World War I massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as
    genocide, a label that Ankara fiercely rejects.

    Nine people have so far been charged over his murder, which prosecutors
    believe was the work of ultra-nationalists.
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