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Arrests Over Turkey Bible Publisher Murders

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  • Arrests Over Turkey Bible Publisher Murders

    ARRESTS OVER TURKEY BIBLE PUBLISHER MURDERS

    CathNews
    http://www.cathnews.com/news/801 /12.php
    Jan 8 2008
    Australia

    This week CathNews presents the top stories from 2007. This article
    was originally published on 20 April 2007

    Turkish police have arrested ten young men as suspects in the throat
    slitting murders of three people at a Protestant Bible publishing
    house.

    Agence France-Presse reports that the murders raised fears and concerns
    over religious freedom among Turkey's tiny Christian community in the
    mainly Muslim country which is also seeking to join the European Union.

    The victims, one of them a German, were found tied to chairs with
    their throats slit at the Zirve (Summit) publishing house, which is
    owned by Turkey's Protestant community.

    Five suspects, including a man who jumped out of a third floor window
    to escape capture, were detained at the scene of the crime.

    Announcing the arrest of the other five, Malatya Governor Halil Ibrahim
    Dasoz gave no details, but said they were all of the same age group -
    young men aged 19 and 20.

    Turkish newspapers said all the suspects apprehended at the scene were
    carrying copies of a letter that read: "We did it for our country. They
    are trying to take our country away, take our religion away."

    They lived together at a local dormitory run by a religious foundation,
    media reports said.

    Police have yet to make a statement on the motives for the murders,
    but the press agreed today that nationalist and religious zeal were
    the likely cause.

    "We did not do this for ourselves, but for our religion... Let this be
    a lesson to the enemies of our religion," one of the suspects allegedly
    said in his testimony, the mass-circulation daily Hurriyet reported.

    Several newspapers linked the attack to others against Christian
    minorities in Turkey, including the killings of Catholic priest Andrea
    Santoro last year and ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in January.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul described the murders as "an
    attack against Turkey's stability, peace and tradition of tolerance".

    Speaking to reporters in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir, European
    Parliament member Joost Lagendijk said the killings would send Europe
    a negative message.

    "Europe will perceive the killings to mean that those who attempt to
    seek converts to other faiths in Turkey will face a similar fate,"
    Mr Lagendijk said.

    The dead were identified named as 46-year-old German Tilman Geske
    and Turkish nationals Necati Aydin and Ugur Yuksel.
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