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  • ANKARA: Murdered journalist's son condemns minister

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    Nov 15 2008

    Murdered journalist's son condemns minister


    ISTANBUL - Arat Dink and the defense minister both agree that the
    population exchanges involving thousands of Turks, Greeks and
    Armenians are what made the country what it is today. The disagreement
    is on the nature of the consequences.


    If the Greeks and Armenians had stayed in Turkey after World War I,
    the country would not have been the same; it would have been much
    better, said the son of murdered Armenian Turkish journalist Hrant
    Dink in a column in daily Taraf on Friday.

    Arat Dink, the executive editor of Armenian weekly Agos, the newspaper
    was founded and headed by his father, Hrant, until Hrant was shot dead
    by a teenage nationalist in January last year. A Prime Ministry report
    last week said the murder could have been avoided if authorities had
    taken certain measures.

    Arat Dink's remarks came only days after Defense Minister Vecdi
    Gönül, while at a NATO meeting in Brussels, asked, "If
    Greeks had stayed on in the Aegean region or Armenians all over the
    country, would we have been the same nation-state?"

    Support or not?
    The comments, interpreted as tacit support for the population exchange
    between Greece and Turkey in 1922 after the Independence War, resulted
    in swift condemnation from civil groups and the more liberal media in
    Turkey. Greek media headlined the story, "Admission of ethnic
    cleansing."

    In his article, Arat Dink said Gönül had merely voiced a
    fact, however, the way he expressed this fact showed he interpreted
    the lack of Armenians and Greeks in Turkey as a positive part of the
    nation-building process.

    In his answer to Gönül's question, Arat said, "No, the
    country would not have been the same. It would have been super. Even
    if nothing changed at least you would not be defense minister. If you
    were, you would not even have thought what you said. If you had
    thought it, you would not dare say it. If you did, you would not stay
    defense minister for long."

    Dink said Gönül was describing the lack of Greeks and
    Armenians as positive. He added, "There is also an interesting often
    forgotten fact. We are still here. We are few, but we are here. Is the
    minister implying we should go too?"

    The fact that Greeks and Armenians who lived in Anatolia before World
    War I owned most of the good land in the country cannot be used as an
    excuse, said Arat Dink, adding, "This theory confuses me even
    more. Were they moved out because they owned good land or was their
    removal a security matter?" He said the oath recited by primary school
    students every week, dedicating their existence to the country, should
    be altered for children going to schools for minorities. Dink said
    those children should shout, "I dedicate my disappearance to the
    country."

    PM faces tough choice on Dink murder

    The prime minister has received a report stating the murder of Turkish
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink could have been prevented, reported the
    daily Milliyet on Friday.

    The Prime Ministry inspector board's report to Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip ErdoÄ?an said Dink's murder in January last year could
    have been avoided had senior security officials responded to the
    intelligence gathered on the plans for the murder.

    If ErdoÄ?an agrees, investigations may start against Istanbul
    Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah, Trabzon gendarmerie commander at the
    time of the murder, Col. Ali Ã-z, and then Trabzon Police chief
    Ramazan Akyürek, whose failure to act upon the intelligence was
    deemed crucial in the failure to prevent the murder.

    The PM office's inspector board took action upon the letter of Dink's
    wife, Rakel Dink, who demanded ErdoÄ?an not let the case be
    covered up.

    The report noted the inciter of the Dink murder, Yasin Hayal, who
    bombed a McDonalds in Trabzon in October 2004, communicated over a
    different phone line that was electronically tapped at the time of
    bombing.

    An informer working for the Police, Erhan Tuncel was influential in
    the McDonalds bombing, the report concluded. "If Tuncel's role in the
    McDonald's bombing could have been solved, the Dink murder might have
    been prevented," it said.

    The report identified several acts of negligence by security
    officials, who failed to act in time to prevent the murder.
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