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Turkey Releases Teenager Planning `Massacre' In Church

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  • Turkey Releases Teenager Planning `Massacre' In Church

    Canada Free Press, Canada
    Jan 14 2008


    Turkey Releases Teenager Planning `Massacre' In Church
    By OnTheWeb: BosNewsLife Monday, January 14, 2008


    A Turkish teenager who vowed to kill the pastor of a Protestant
    church and `massacre' Christians in the Black Sea coastal city of
    Samsun has been released by a local court because he is `too young'
    Turkish media reported Tuesday, January 8.


    The 17-year-old Semih Seymen was detained over the weekend after he
    called Pastor Orhan Picaklar of the Samsun Agape Churchseveral times
    since late December, threatening to kill him, said Turkey's Taraf
    newspaper.

    Police forces specialized in anti-terror actions monitoring the phone
    calls tracked down the suspect and arrested him Saturday, January 5,
    officials said. However Judge Sinan Sonmez of Samsun's First Minor
    Petty Offenses Court apparently ruled the next day, Sunday, January
    6, that Seymen should be released because of his youth.

    Pastor Picaklar reportedly condemned the decision saying in published
    remarks that the defendant `openly confessed he was going to carry
    out a massacre...' It came after previous attacks against the church,
    including in January 2007, when some 30 heavy rocks were thrown
    through the Samsun Agape Church windows, several of them smashing
    interior windows and denting walls, the pastor said earlier.

    VERY DRUNK
    Turkish media said Seymen admitted he had told friends late Saturday,
    January 5, he wanted to `do a massacre' the next morning at the Agape
    Church during Sunday worship. However Seymen allegedly also told
    police interrogators he was drunk when making the threats and that
    they could not be taken seriously.

    He also wanted to threaten the Trabzon Catholic Church, but
    reportedly changed his mind when a woman answered the phone. The
    latest threats underscored anxiety among Christian leaders in a
    country where at least five Christians were killed and several others
    injured in attacks within the last two years.

    In April last year, a German and two Turkish citizens - were found
    with their hands and legs bound and their throats slit at the Zirve
    Christian publishing house in the central city of Malatya.

    The attack came shortly after a suspected nationalist killed Armenian
    Christian editor Hrant Dink. In February 2006, a Turkish teenager
    shot a Catholic priest dead as he prayed in his church, and two other
    Catholic priests were attacked later that year.

    LATEST ATTACK
    One of the latest, non-fatal, attacks occurred last month when an
    Italian Roman Catholic priest, Driano Franchini, was stabbed December
    16, after Sunday Mass at St. Anthony's church in the port city of
    Izmir. He was released from hospital several days later.

    A prosecutor charged a 19-year-old man with stabbing and wounding
    with a knife, but no trial date was set yet, BosNewsLife monitored.

    The European Union has complained that Turkey, an EU applicant, fails
    to fully protect the religious freedoms of its tiny Christian
    minority, which numbers some 100,000 in a predominantly Muslim
    population of nearly 75 million people, according to estimates.

    While Turkey is officially `secular' Muslim militants and
    nationalists oppose Christian activities in the country, analysts and
    church observers say. (With BosNewsLife's Stefan J. Bos and reporting
    from Turkey).



    http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/1 374
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