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Turkey commemorates Armenian journalist's slaying

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  • Turkey commemorates Armenian journalist's slaying

    The Canadian Press
    Jan 19 2008


    Turkey commemorates Armenian journalist's slaying


    ISTANBUL, Turkey - Thousands of people gathered Saturday to mark the
    killing of a Turkish Armenian journalist one year ago, placing red
    carnations on the spot where he was gunned down in daylight and
    demanding justice in the case.

    Wearing black and holding placards reading "For Hrant. For Justice,"
    the protesters paid tribute to Hrant Dink, a Turkish citizen of
    Armenian origins who angered many by calling the century-old killings
    of Armenians a genocide. Turkey insists the killings resulted from
    civil war and unrest in the last days of the First World War.

    On Jan. 19, 2007, Dink was gunned down outside his office, allegedly
    by a hardline nationalist teenager.

    The killing brought international condemnation and sparked a debate
    about freedom of speech in Turkey, where massive crowds took to the
    streets, chanting: "We are all Armenians, we are all Hrants."

    Saturday's crowd repeated the same slogan, before standing for a
    moment in silence in front of the Agos newspaper office, where Dink
    had been chief editor. Holding placards written in Turkish, Armenian
    and English, the mourners then attended a commemoration ceremony at
    Agos, where a huge photograph of Dink covered part of the newspaper
    building.

    "We are here today because we want justice," his wife, Rakel Dink,
    said in an address to the mourners, many of whom had pinned pictures
    of the slain journalist to their chests.

    She vowed to press further for justice, saying the judiciary had not
    followed up on evidence suggesting officials may have been involved
    in the plot to kill her husband.

    Dink had sought to encourage reconciliation between Turkey and
    Armenia, but several years before his death he was prosecuted under
    Turkish law for describing the early 20th-century mass killings of
    Armenians as genocide.

    "Despite all the past grievances among Turks and Armenians, he never
    expressed hatred," said Mevlut Yilmaz at the ceremony Saturday. "He
    was thinking about the future, not the past."

    Turkey's top politicians, including the prime minister, have vowed a
    thorough investigation. An Istanbul court is looking into allegations
    of official negligence or even collusion, but lawyers for Dink's
    family have said the investigation is flawed.

    The murder trial, which started last year, is taking place behind
    closed doors because the alleged gunman is a minor. A total of 19
    suspects are on trial, and the next hearing is scheduled for Feb. 11.

    Dink was prosecuted for his Armenian genocide comments under an
    article of Turkey's penal code, which bans insults to Turkish
    identity. Despite appeals by the European Union, the law remains
    unchanged.
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