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ANKARA: Pro-Armenian scholar blames 'deep state' for Dink's murder

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  • ANKARA: Pro-Armenian scholar blames 'deep state' for Dink's murder

    Turkish Daily News, Turkey
    Jan 19 2008


    Pro-Armenian scholar blames 'deep state' for Dink's murder
    Saturday, January 19, 2008

    ÜMÝT ENGÝNSOY
    WASHINGTON - Turkish Daily News


    Turkey's atmosphere of intolerance is to blame for the murder of
    Hrant Dink a Turkish academic in the United States, who also spoke in
    Washington about Turkish-Armenian relations, said Thursday.

    Turkey's `deep state' is guilty of masterminding last year's
    killing of Dink, a prominent Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor, said
    Taner Akçam, a Turkish academic backing Armenian `genocide' claims.

    This `deep state' is an underground coalition of part of the
    security forces and unelected bureaucrats determined to impede
    Turkey's democratization, Akçam, who is a former left-wing militant
    and now a visiting associate professor of history at the University
    of Minnesota, said at a news conference here.

    Dink, editor of the Armenian-Turkish Agos newspaper, was shot to
    death in front of his Istanbul office on Jan. 19, 2007. A nationalist
    youth was apprehended for the murder and has confessed to the crime.
    His trial is ongoing.

    Dink's murder was much more complicated than an isolated crime and
    was a result of a `dangerous mindset' in Turkey, Akçam said.

    "A climate has been created such that to attack and persecute an
    intellectual is considered a patriotic act,' he said, adding, `the
    media targets and attacks intellectuals and turns them into prey...
    the justice system punishes the intellectuals, and thugs are used as
    pawns to attack and kill the targeted intellectuals.'

    What he called the atmosphere of intolerance in Turkey has
    worsened, rather than improved, in the year following Dink's murder,
    Akçam said.



    'Repeal Article 301'

    Akçam called on Turkey to abolish Article 301 of the Turkish Penal
    Code, which criminalizes `insulting Turkishness,' under which Dink
    had been prosecuted.

    Turkey does not have to formally label World War I-era killings of
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as `genocide' to resolve the dispute
    with Armenians, Akçam said, speaking at the Southeast Europe Project
    at the Woodrow Wilson Center, a Washington-based research center. A
    Turkish move to accept "the crimes committed against Armenians" and
    apologize or make a related gesture would solve the problem, he said.

    The Ottomans had decided to remove the Armenians from their homes
    as early as 1913, shortly after their defeat in the Balkan War, Akçam
    said, disputing the Turkish argument that an Armenian rebellion in
    cooperation with invading Russian forces in eastern Anatolia had
    prompted the Ottoman government to forcibly relocate Armenians. He
    gave no evidence, however, only saying he had proved it in his new
    book.

    Some Armenians in Istanbul and western Anatolia had also been
    deported, Akçam added, but again he gave no evidence, only referring
    to his book.He supported Ankara's proposal for the creation of a
    joint Turkish-Armenian commission of historians to probe the genocide
    claim, adding that such a project would not work if Turkey did not
    set up diplomatic and other relations with Armenia.
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