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Thousands Commemorate Killing Of Turkish-Armenian Journalist

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  • Thousands Commemorate Killing Of Turkish-Armenian Journalist

    THOUSANDS COMMEMORATE KILLING OF TURKISH-ARMENIAN JOURNALIST

    BosNewsLife
    Jan 21 2008
    Hungary

    ISTANBUL, TURKEY (BosNewsLife)-- Thousands of grief-stricken
    supporters marked the first anniversary of the killing of Hrant Dink,
    a Turkish-Armenian journalist gunned down in Istanbul last year after
    criticizing mass killings of predominantly Christian Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks and Kurds in the 1915-1917 period.

    Demonstrators, many holding black-and-white placards reading:
    "For Hrant, for justice", in Turkish, Armenian and other languages,
    expressed frustration Saturday, January 19, that the trial of those
    allegedly involved in the murder is taking place behind closed doors
    because the apparent gunman is a minor.

    A total of 19 suspects are on trial, however human rights group Amnesty
    International has urged Turkey to widen the investigation into his
    death amid reports of alleged complicity of security officials.

    Dink said before his death he had received a number of death threats
    over his writings. His work also brought him a suspended 6-month jail
    sentence under Turkey's article 301, a law that makes it a crime to
    insult Turkish identity. The European Union, which Turkey wants to
    join, has expressed concerns about the legislation.

    JUSTICE MINISTER

    In published remarks, Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin said that
    work on changes to the infamous Article 301 has been completed and
    that a proposed amendment to the legislation will be submitted to
    Parliament for debate.

    Dink was convicted for an article he penned in the minority newspaper
    Agos expressing his views on the mass killings of Armenians at the
    hands of the Ottomans since 1915. Up to 1.5 million Armenians,
    Assyrians and Hellenic Christians were killed in the 1915-1917
    genocide, according to at least a dozen countries. Turkey has both
    denied these figures or involvement by Turkish Ottoman in mass murder
    and refuses to recognize that "genocide" took place.

    Dink, who was the editor of Agos, was shot outside his office on
    January 19, 2007, allegedly by a hard-line nationalist teenager
    opposing his views. His killing led to international condemnation
    and debate within Turkey about free speech. "We are at the pavement
    where they tried to clean his blood with soap," Dink's wife Rakel
    said in a speech from the office balcony. "You are here for justice
    today. A scream for justice rises from your silence." The crowd held
    a minute's silence at mark the moment when Dink was shot.

    RELIGOUS CEREMONY

    A religious ceremony was to be held in the Armenian Church of Mother
    Mary on Sunday, January 20, to commemorate Dink. His widow, Rakel,
    daughters, Sera and Delal, son Ararat, his brother, Orhan Dink,
    and other officials and representatives of Istanbul's tiny Armenian
    community were to attend the service. Dinks' murder added to concerns
    about attacks against Christians in Turkey.

    At least five Christians were killed and several others injured in
    attacks within the last two years.

    The European Union has complained that Turkey, an EU applicant, fails
    to fully protect the religious freedoms of its tiny Christian minority,
    which numbers some 100,000 in a predominantly Muslim population of
    nearly 75 million people. (With BosNewsLife's Stefan J. Bos).
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