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Pair Guilty Of 'Insulting Turkey'

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  • Pair Guilty Of 'Insulting Turkey'

    PAIR GUILTY OF 'INSULTING TURKEY'

    BBC News, UK
    Oct 11 2007

    The son of murdered Turkish-Armenian writer Hrant Dink has been found
    guilty of insulting "Turkishness", along with another newspaper editor.

    Arat Dink and Serkis Seropyan were convicted after printing Dink's
    claims that the killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks from 1915
    was genocide.

    The verdict came a day after a US congressional committee backed a
    bill labelling the killings as genocide.

    Turkish leaders reacted angrily, but the decision was welcomed by
    Armenians.

    The non-binding US vote, passed by 27 to 21 votes by members of the
    congressional House Foreign Affairs Committee, is the first step
    towards holding a vote in the House of Representatives.

    Outspoken

    Arat Dink and Mr Seropyan, who both work as editors at Agos, a leading
    bilingual Turkish and Armenian weekly newspaper, were given one-year
    suspended sentences for printing comments made by Hrant Dink during
    an interview.

    Dink, the editor-in-chief of the newspaper, was one of Turkey's most
    prominent Armenian voices.

    Hrant Dink was one of Turkey's most prominent Armenian voices

    He was shot dead outside his Istanbul office in January 2007.

    At the time he was appealing against a prior conviction for the same
    offence - insulting the Turkish identity under Article 301 of the
    country's penal code.

    Turkey faces ongoing international pressure to scrap the offence,
    under which dozens of writers who have been charged, often for articles
    dealing with killings of Kurds or Ottoman Armenians.

    Hundreds of thousands of Armenians died in 1915 and the following
    years at the hands of Ottoman Turks.

    Armenians have campaigned for the killings to be described
    internationally as genocide. More than a dozen countries, various
    international bodies and many Western historians have done so.

    Turkey admits that many Armenians were killed but it denies any
    genocide, saying the deaths were a part of World War I.

    Turkey and neighbouring Armenia still have no official relations.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7040 171.stm
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