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CPJ: Editor Killed By Unknown Gunmen In Turkey

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  • CPJ: Editor Killed By Unknown Gunmen In Turkey

    EDITOR KILLED BY UNKNOWN GUNMEN IN TURKEY

    CPJ Press Freedom Online
    http://cpj.org/2009/12/editor-killed-by-unk nown-gunmen-in-turkey.php
    Dec 21 2009

    New York, December 21, 2009--The Committee to Protect Journalists
    called on Turkish authorities today to locate the killers of journalist
    Cihan Hayırsevener and bring them to justice. Hayırsevener, at
    left, editor of the local daily newspaper Guney Marmara'da YaÅ~_am,
    was shot three times in the leg on December 19 while walking to his
    office in Bandirma, a town 60 miles (100 kilometers) northeast of
    Istanbul, according to local news reports.

    One bullet hit a major artery in his left leg, causing intensive
    bleeding. He was taken by ambulance to Bandirma State Hospital, and
    later moved to a medical facility in Bursa where he died. The gunman
    escaped in a vehicle immediately following the shooting, the Anatolia
    news agency reported. Authorities have been actively investigating
    the murder, his family told CPJ.

    Hayırsevener had recently received multiple anonymous death threats
    in connection with his journalism, according to local news accounts.

    "Recently, we received an envelope," said Umit Babacan, an editor at
    Guney Marmara'da YaÅ~_am. "Inside was a clipping from a novel called
    AÅ~_k (Love) by Elif Safak. It said that evil cannot be seen, that
    it is in the heart, and that it cannot be washed out. The threat was
    not explicit, but Cihan and I could feel the danger."

    Hayırsevener had been reporting on a local corruption scandal
    involving three owners of Ä°lkhaber, another major daily in Bandirma.

    The three are currently in prison on corruption charges, Turkish
    media reported. They were found guilty of accepting cash payouts
    from a former mayor. Before his death, Hayırsevener's investigation
    was focusing on what the payments were in exchange for, according to
    local news reports.

    "We are saddened by the murder of Cihan Hayırsevener and offer our
    condolences to his family and colleagues," said Mohamed Abdel Dayem,
    CPJ's Middle East and North Africa program coordinator. "We urge the
    police to move quickly to ensure that the perpetrators are held to
    account for this cowardly act."

    Hayırsevener, 57, founded Guney Marmara'da YaÅ~_am nine years ago and
    covered news in Bandirma and surrounding areas. He is survived by his
    wife and two children. The journalist's daughter, Gaye Hayırsevener,
    told CPJ: "We feel a great sadness especially knowing that the
    perpetrators are still at large. The police are still investigating,
    but we want to know where the orders came from; we want justice."

    Although Turkey has made significant strides in press freedom in
    recent years, European Union officials recently warned the country
    about domestic challenges to freedom of expression as part of the
    Turkey's annual review in its bid to join the European Union. The
    last killing of a journalist in Turkey took place in 2007 when Hrant
    Dink, managing editor of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos,
    was shot outside his newspaper's offices in Istanbul. The Dink murder
    trial is ongoing.
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