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Turks protest editor's murder on anniversary

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  • Turks protest editor's murder on anniversary

    Reuters, UK
    Jan 19 2008


    Turks protest editor's murder on anniversary


    Sat Jan 19, 2008 1:13pm EST
    By Daren Butler and Osman Senkul

    ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Thousands of protesters called on Saturday for
    all those behind the killing of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink to be brought to justice, a year after he was gunned down in a
    murder which shocked Turkey.

    An ultra-nationalist gunman shot Dink outside his office in Istanbul
    on Jan 19, 2007. The subsequent investigation has triggered claims
    police failed to act on warnings his life was in danger.

    Amid tight police security and mournful music, people laid red
    carnations at the spot in central Istanbul where he was killed. A
    huge photograph of Dink was hung from the office of his Armenian
    newspaper Agos for the commemoration ceremony.

    "We are at the pavement where they tried to clean his blood with
    soap," Dink's wife Rakel said in an emotionally-charged speech from
    the office balcony. "You are here for justice today. A scream for
    justice rises from your silence."

    Ankara has vowed to prosecute all those responsible for Dink's
    killing. Nineteen suspects are on trial. The next hearing is on
    February 11.

    Amnesty International urged Turkey on Friday to widen the
    investigation into his death and the media called for the alleged
    complicity of security officials to be fully probed.

    "The killer state will be called to account," many in the crowd of
    several thousand chanted.

    "For Hrant, For Justice," said black-and-white placards, in Turkish,
    Armenian and other languages, held aloft by the crowd as they marked
    a minute's silence at the moment he was shot.

    "Despite the capture of those who killed Hrant, the powers behind
    them are still at large ... what is needed is a courageous political
    will. In short what is needed is Hrant's courage," journalist Oral
    Calislar told Reuters.

    "ROTTEN APPLES"

    Before his murder, Dink received death threats for his articles
    urging Turkey to accept responsibility for its part in mass killings
    of Armenians by Ottoman Turks and Kurds in 1915.

    The murder was one in a series of attacks in recent years on Turkey's
    small Christian population, which includes Roman Catholics,
    Protestants and Orthodox.

    "I can see that justice has not been done and it makes me angry ...
    but I believe if we raise our voices justice will be achieved," said
    advertising executive Ulas Arikan, 50.

    According to the court indictment, one of the defendants in the Dink
    case acted as a police informer and told the police of plans to
    assassinate the editor in the months before the murder.

    Dink's writings brought him a suspended 6-month jail sentence under a
    law that makes it a crime to insult Turkish identity. Ankara has
    failed to amend or scrap the law, despite pressure from the European
    Union which calls it a major obstacle to free speech and to Turkey's
    goal of joining the bloc.

    The government has failed to learn the lessons of Dink's killing,
    according to Radikal columnist Murat Yetkin.

    "(Prime Minister Tayyip) Erdogan, who claims leadership of the
    Alliance of Civilisations, should sort out those who want to turn his
    country into a hell for non-Muslims," he said.

    "All the government's bodies associated with security, starting with
    the interior ministry, must root out the rotten apples within," he
    said.

    (Writing by Daren Butler; editing by Andrew Roche)
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