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ANKARA: Samatya residents protest attacks on Armenians

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  • ANKARA: Samatya residents protest attacks on Armenians

    Samatya residents protest attacks on Armenians
    All the speakers condemned the police department and accused it of
    covering up the reality behind the attacks.

    http://www.worldbulletin.net/?aType=haber&ArticleID=102418
    27 January 2013 Sunday

    World Bulletin / News Desk

    Residents, civil society groups and political party representatives
    gathered in the central square of Ä°stanbul's Samatya neighborhood on
    Sunday to protest a number of attacks committed against elderly
    Armenian women in their homes over the past few months, one of which
    resulted in a death, with police failing to capture the assailants.
    `Don't touch my neighbor' and `I will not let you hurt my brothers and
    sisters' read some of the signs held by the protesters. Dozens joined
    the rally, including Mersin independent deputy ErtuÄ?rul Kürkçü and
    Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) Ä°stanbul deputy Sebahat Tuncel. She
    attended in her capacity as a representative of the Peoples'
    Democratic Congress (HDK), a Kurdish civil society organization that
    also organized Sunday's rally.
    The crowd also lay carnations in front of the apartment building of
    one of the victims, presumably that of Maritsa Küçük, who was brutally
    murdered in her apartment.
    All the speakers condemned the police department and accused it of
    covering up the reality behind the attacks.
    Five women were attacked in the past two months. Police say there is
    no ethnic targeting, claiming that only three of the women attacked
    were Armenian. But civil society groups insist that the events were no
    ordinary cases of robbery, as nothing valuable was taken from the
    houses of the attacked women. There were also claims that the attacks
    could have been perpetrated by construction mafia seeking to prevent
    elderly homeowners from holding up new constructions in the region.
    However, the message in Sunday's march was clear, with most protesters
    saying they did not buy the police's interpretation of the events.
    On Saturday, a group of 30 members of the Freedom and Democracy Party
    (Ã-DP) protested the attacks in front of the KocamustafapaÅ?a Train
    Station. Ã-DP Ä°stanbul provincial branch secretary Çiçek Çatalkaya in a
    speech she made here referred to the attacks as `racist and fascist,'
    and asserted that these were not isolated incidents. `We know that
    these attacks are not related to profit seekers from urban renewal
    projects. We know this because the blood that was shed on this land
    100 years ago has still not dried,' Çatalkaya said, in reference to
    the 1915 massacre of Armenians in Turkey's Southeast.
    The first attack in the past few months was on Nov. 1, 2012. A woman
    named Gönül A. was beaten by an intruder, and her valuables were
    stolen. On Nov. 28, Tuivat A. (87) was attacked inside her house. She
    lost one eye in the attack and her valuables were also taken. On Dec.
    28, Maritsa Küçük (85) was brutally murdered in her house, where she
    lived alone. In the fifth attack, Sultan Aykar (80) was stabbed as she
    entered her house.

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