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ANKARA: Thousands Remembering Dink Demand Justice

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  • ANKARA: Thousands Remembering Dink Demand Justice

    THOUSANDS REMEMBERING DINK DEMAND JUSTICE

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 21 2008
    Turkey

    Thousands gathered on Saturday in front of the Agos weekly newspaper
    in Ýstanbul to commemorate its former editor-in-chief, Hrant Dink,
    on the first anniversary of his death and called for all those behind
    the murder to be brought to justice.

    Dink was shot dead in front of the same building on Jan. 19, 2007,
    by an ultranationalist teenager named O.S. Those participating in the
    ceremony started gathering in front of Agos, located on Halaskargazi
    Street in the central Beyoðlu area, in the early morning hours carrying
    banners reading "For Hrant, For Justice."

    Flowers were laid and candles lit on the street, while a huge picture
    of Dink covered part of the building where he had worked.

    Turkish and Armenian versions of the song "My Brave, My Lion Is
    Lying Here" as well as other Turkish and Armenian folk songs Dink
    loved were played during the ceremony. The demonstrators sounded
    an Armenian woodwind instrument known as the duduk at 2:58 p.m.,
    the time of the shooting.

    Nineteen people, including two leaders of an ultranationalist group,
    are currently on trial for Dink's murder at a court in Istanbul. But
    those higher up who may have abetted the murder or covered up for
    fellow police continue to act with impunity, despite widespread
    evidence of tampering with the investigation.

    "We are on the street where they tried to clean his blood with soap,"
    Dink's widow, Rakel, said in an emotional address from a window in
    the newspaper's office.

    "You are here for justice today. A scream for justice rises from your
    silence," she stated.

    The murder of Dink one year ago triggered widespread anger and shock
    in Turkey and caused massive crowds to take to the streets, chanting
    "We are all Armenians, we are all Hrant Dinks."

    Turkish Penal Code (TCK) Article 301, under which Dink was convicted,
    had been blamed for his death since it made him a target for
    ultranationalists. Article 301, which criminalizes the ambiguous
    concept of denigrating "Turkishness," has proven itself to be a major
    obstacle to freedom of speech.

    Dink was convicted for an article he penned in Agos expressing his
    views on the mass killings of Armenians at the hands of the Ottomans
    in 1915. The Armenians say the killings amounted to genocide, while
    Turkey denies it.

    On Saturday Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Þahin told journalists that
    work on changes to the infamous Article 301 has been completed. Þahin
    said the proposed amendment to the article will be submitted to
    Parliament as a draft for debate in a general assembly session.

    In response to criticism that the Dink investigation and trial were
    moving very slowly, he stated that such trials could not be completed
    overnight and that patience was needed. He said the prosecutors were
    being very diligent in their investigation. "Such important trials
    may not always be completed in a year; you have to understand that,"
    he said.

    Meanwhile, a religious ceremony was held in the Armenian Church of
    Mother Mary on Sunday to commemorate Dink. His widow, Rakel, daughters,
    Sera and Delal, son Ararat, his brother, Orhan Dink, Mayor of Þiþli
    Mustafa Sarýgul and members of Ýstanbul's tiny Armenian community
    attended the service led by Zakeus Orhanyan.

    --Boundary_(ID_9TUg3xYIT2ZoCYdxHk/QjQ)- -
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