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  • Fallen Turkish diplomat honoured at memorial; Killing of Altikat in

    CanWest News Service, Canada
    August 26, 2012 Sunday 09:01 PM EST



    Fallen Turkish diplomat honoured at memorial; Killing of Altikat in
    1982 remains unsolved

    by: alicja siekierska, Ottawa Citizen


    Dozens of Turkish-Canadians, diplomats and friends gathered on the
    grass by the intersection at Island Park Drive and the Sir John A.
    Macdonald Parkway on Sunday to commemorate a solemn day in Ottawa's
    history.

    It was near that very location, 30 years ago, that Turkish military
    attaché Col. Atilla Altikat, 45, was assassinated, becoming the first
    victim of international terrorism on Canadian soil.

    On Aug. 27, 1982, Altikat was driving to the Turkish Embassy. While
    his car was stopped at a red light by Island Park Drive, a man
    casually walked over to the passenger side of the vehicle and shot him
    10 times before running away.

    A terrorist organization called the Justice Commandos of the Armenian
    Genocide (JCAG) claimed responsibility for the attack.

    Just one week before Altikat was murdered, former Canadian diplomat
    Paul Heinbecker spent the day with him and his family. Heinbecker
    called Altikat was a smart man who had a promising future in
    diplomacy.

    "It was a terrible shock," said Heinbecker, who attended Sunday's event.

    "Every time that I pass by this corner, my heart is heavy and I feel
    sad," said Zahide Sezerman, the president of the Council of Turkish
    Canadians.

    Most of the people in attendance Sunday had photos of Altikat pinned
    over their hearts. A moment of silence was observed.

    Sunday's memorial was about more than commemorating the life of Altikat, though.

    Today, many Turkish-Canadians are calling on the Canadian government
    to give justice to all Turkish-Canadians and find the person or people
    responsible for the killing.

    "No one has been brought to justice," said Huseyin Nurgel, president
    of the Federation of Canadian Turkish Associations. "We want justice.
    This was a criminal, terrorist activity that cannot be tolerated in
    Canada. Something needs to be done."

    The JCAG was an organization that operated between 1973 and 1986 and
    sought revenge for what it said was genocide of the Armenian people by
    the former Ottoman Empire during the First World War.

    In 2004, the Liberal government officially recognized the Armenian
    genocide, and Parliament passed a resolution denouncing the Turks for
    committing genocide against Armenians in 1915.

    It was a decision that still does not sit well with many
    Turkish-Canadians, given that Altikat's killer was never apprehended,
    said one of the memorial's organizers, Ozay Mehmet.

    "There is a miscarriage of justice involving the case of a Turkish
    diplomat here," Mehmet said. "The perpetrators are still at large. We
    hope and pray that by finally catching those responsible, Altikat's
    memory is cherished for peace and reconciliation."

    The memorial was concluded just a few steps from a monument under
    construction that is meant to honour fallen diplomats, and Altikat in
    particular.

    Nurgel said he expected the monument to be revealed by the National
    Capital Commission and Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird at the end
    of September. The recognition by the federal government of what
    happened 30 years ago was something Turkish-Canadians would
    appreciate, he said.

    However, Nurgel and others continue to hope that Canada will find
    those responsible for the killing of Altikat.

    "We are probably the most successful country in the world at
    integrating foreigners and protecting human rights," Heinbecker said.
    "But we cannot allow this kind of cancer of terrorism to eat away at
    what we have accomplished."

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