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YouTube Video Allegedly Praising Journalist's Killer Proves Popular

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  • YouTube Video Allegedly Praising Journalist's Killer Proves Popular

    YOUTUBE VIDEO ALLEGEDLY PRAISING JOURNALIST'S KILLER PROVES POPULAR
    By C. Onur Ant, Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    September 24, 2007 Monday 2:54 PM GMT

    A homemade video clip set to a popular folk song that allegedly
    praises the suspected killer of an ethnic Armenian journalist has
    received hundreds of thousands of hits on the popular video-sharing
    Web site YouTube.

    A radio DJ says the month-old song quickly rose to become one of the
    most requested songs on his show after word of the YouTube clip spread.

    But a human rights group has asked prosecutors to take action against
    the folk singer and the songwriter for allegedly inciting ethnic
    hatred and violence. Prosecutors have launched an investigation into
    the video that shows Hrant Dink's dead body, followed by a heroic
    pose of his suspected teenage killer, who will stand trial next week.

    Folk singer Ismail Turut who describes himself as a Muslim and a
    nationalist denies any links to the making of the YouTube video and
    says he does not approve of Dink's murder.

    But the lyrics of the controversial song, written by Arif Ozan go: "If
    someone betrays his own country, he will be taken care of immediately."

    Dink was slain outside his newspaper in January. He had been criticized
    for calling the mass killings of Armenians early in the century in
    the hands of Ottomans a "genocide" in defiance of the official Turkish
    line and was being prosecuted for insulting the Turkish identity.

    Although thousands of Turks marched at his funeral to condemn the
    killing, some extreme nationalists view the teenage killer and his
    alleged accomplice as heroes for punishing the journalist who they
    feel betrayed the nation.

    "He (Turut) must apologize," said Riza Dalkilic, head of Istanbul
    branch of the Human Rights Association who filed the complaint. The
    group is known for its advocacy of minorities and freedom of
    expression.

    Turut said he had nothing to do with the YouTube clip and insisted his
    song is harmless. He was speaking a day after he and the writer of the
    song testified to a prosecutor to explain the meaning of their work.

    "Even if I have 40 heads and they chop off all of them, I will not
    apologize for even a letter (of the song)," said Turut. "Who has been
    subject to the slightest of harm because of my song?"

    The killings of Armenians constitutes a shadowy part of Turkish
    history that predates the modern republic.

    Up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed from 1915 to 1917 in what
    Armenians and others say was a genocide. Turkey insists the numbers
    are inflated and that the killings occurred during a time of civil
    unrest during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

    The slain journalist is not the only Turkish intellectual hated for
    expressing his opinion. Nobel literature laureate Orhan Pamuk is
    reviled by many Turks, mostly ultra-nationalists, for talking about
    the killings of ethnic Armenians and Kurds. He reportedly received
    many death threats.

    The European Union, which Turkey is vying to be a member of, has
    asked Ankara to remove restrictions on freedom of expression such as
    the penal code article which bars insulting the Turkish identity.

    Despite grumbling by some Cabinet members regarding the article,
    a sweeping change seems unlikely in the short term.

    Ironically, Turut and Arif also say their song should be tolerated
    if freedom of expression really exists.

    "I feel like a victim in my homeland for defending some of our values"
    Turut said. "Don't I have the right to freedom of expression?"

    Associated Press reporter Volkan Sarisakal in Istanbul contributed
    to this report.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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