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Turkish-Armenian Journalist Indicted Again

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  • Turkish-Armenian Journalist Indicted Again

    TURKISH-ARMENIAN JOURNALIST INDICTED AGAIN

    Agence France Presse -- English
    September 25, 2006 Monday 4:52 PM GMT

    An Istanbul court has indicted Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink for "denigrating the Turkish national identity" by calling the
    1915-17 massacres of Armenians a "genocide", his lawyer said on Monday.

    Dink received a suspended three-month jail sentence in October for an
    article about the mass killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire,
    which many countries recognise as genocide. An appeal was rejected
    in July.

    The European Union condemned Dink's conviction at that point, and the
    journalist "granted an interview to a foreign news agency on the 1915
    events, in which he employed certain words," as his lawyer put it,
    speaking to AFP.

    If convicted again, the journalist will have to serve his original
    sentence plus a possible three more years.

    His lawyer Fethiye Cetin said the new proceedings had been sparked
    when Agos, the bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly that Dink edits,
    reprinted excerpts from the July interview.

    In the interview, Dink says of the World War I killings of Armenians:
    "Of course I say this is a genocide, because the result itself
    identifies what it is and gives it a name. You can see that a people
    who have been living on these lands for four thousand years have
    disappeared. This is self-explanatory."

    Ankara refuses to apply the term genocide to the events. Earlier this
    month it rejected a European Union report saying that it should do
    so as a condition for joining the bloc.

    Nevertheless, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan hinted last week
    that Article 301 of the Turksh penal code -- which is the legal basis
    for Dink's indictment and for most proceedings against intellectuals
    who speak out about the Armenian question -- could be amended.

    The EU has repeatedly warned Ankara that the prosecution of
    intellectuals for exercising their right to free speech is damaging
    Turkey's membership bid.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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