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85-Year-Old Christian Woman In Turkey Repeatedly Stabbed, Cross Carv

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  • 85-Year-Old Christian Woman In Turkey Repeatedly Stabbed, Cross Carv

    85-YEAR-OLD CHRISTIAN WOMAN IN TURKEY REPEATEDLY STABBED, CROSS CARVED ONTO HER CORPSE

    http://www.aina.org/news/20130129125058.htm
    Posted GMT 1-29-2013 18:50:58

    MARISSA Kucuk was a little old Armenian lady who lived on her own in
    Samatya, a picturesque neighbourhood of Istanbul where Christians and
    Muslims used to rub along peacefully. On December 28th Ms Kucuk, 85,
    was found dead in her apartment. She had been stabbed, repeatedly.

    Relatives said a crucifix was carved onto her naked corpse.

    Last week, a masked assailant attacked another elderly Armenian as
    she was entering her apartment. He punched her in the head. When
    she fell to the ground he began kicking her. "My mother's mouth
    was filled with blood...the neighbours came to the rescue when she
    screamed for help and the man fled," Maryam Yelegen, told AGOS,
    a Turkish Armenian weekly.

    The attack marks the fifth in the past two months against elderly
    Armenian women (one has lost an eye). All of the attacks took place
    in Samatya, which is home to some 8,000 Armenians and the seat of the
    Armenian Orthodox Patriarchate. Opinion remains divided as to whether
    these are organised hate crimes targeting non-Muslims or just random
    theft. Istanbul's governor, Huseyin Avni Mutlu, insists that it was
    the latter. "The incident was inspired by robbery, there were no
    racial motives. Be sure we will find the perpetrators. Good night,"
    he tweeted to some 100,000 followers.

    Some of the victims were, indeed, robbed. The Turkish police are said
    to be concentrating their investigation on a man in his thirties as a
    potential suspect. Turkey's Human Rights Association remains unswayed.

    "The attacks were carried out with racist motives," it concluded in
    a report that was published last week.

    Either way, the attacks have dredged up memories of the mass slaughter
    of about a million Ottoman Armenians in 1915. "The attacks highlight
    the unbearable heaviness of being Armenian in Turkey," says Khatchig
    Mouradian an Armenian activist and academic who lost ancestors in
    the killings.

    Academic opinion worldwide tilts towards the view that these
    constituted genocide. Turkey refutes this saying the majority died
    of illness and hunger during forced deportations to the Syrian desert.

    Those who dared to challenge the official line (among them Orhan Pamuk,
    Turkey's sole Nobel laureate for literature) have faced prosecution
    and death threats. But none as much as Hrant Dink, the outspoken
    Armenian journalist who founded AGOS as a platform for unfettered
    debate about 1915. He was murdered in 2007 by an ultra-nationalist
    youth outside his office in the heart of Istanbul.

    Mr Dink's family insists that the killer was acting under orders from
    rogue ultra-nationalist elements within the security forces, who,
    in turn, were probably linked to a Byzantine plot known as "Kafes"
    or Cage.

    Scores of suspects, including three admirals tied to Kafes are being
    tried on charges of conspiring to murder Christians in Turkey. Their
    alleged aim was to intimidate Christians into leaving for good, place
    the blame on Turkey's Islam-tinged Justice and Development (AK) Party
    and thus lay the ground for the army to intervene. The 2007 murders
    of three Christian missionaries in the eastern province of Malatya
    (their throats were slit) are believed to be part of Kafes. Orhan Kemal
    Cengiz, a lawyer for the victims, sees parallels between the Kafes
    plot and "the ultra-nationalist mentality informing 1915" which tends
    to view "citizens of Armenian descent as disloyal and untrustworthy."

    Fresh evidence emerged last week suggesting that local gendarmerie
    officials kept thousands of pages worth of files on missionaries
    and other Christians in Malatya. But the defence argues that the
    evidence was "sexed up" by prosecutors as in the Sledgehammer case,
    another alleged coup plot. Independent forensic experts have supported
    these claims.

    In any case Mr Cengiz says had the Kafes suspects not been brought to
    trial attacks against Christians would have continued. Many credit AK
    for easing pressure on non-Muslims. A small but vocal group of Turkish
    historians now openly talk about genocide. Bookstores have entire
    shelves devoted to the topic. Tens of thousands of illegal migrants
    from the neighbouring Republic of Armenia with which Turkey has no
    official ties work in Istanbul, as the authorities look the other way.

    "Reconciliation" projects between Turks and Armenians have become so
    commonplace that hawks on both sides no longer blink.

    Yet the message from the government is somewhat mixed. Mehmet Nihat
    Omeroglu, the controversial judge who upheld a conviction of Mr Dink
    for "insulting Turkishness", was recently sworn in by the parliament
    as the head of the newly created ombudsman institution. The case was
    widely publicised and helped to whip up nationalist fervour against Mr
    Dink. Mr Omeroglu apparently has no regrets. "We made our decision on
    this case on the basis of our conscience," the ombudsman told Radikal,
    a liberal daily.

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