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Killing Puts Spotlight On Bloody Past

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  • Killing Puts Spotlight On Bloody Past

    KILLING PUTS SPOTLIGHT ON BLOODY PAST
    Thomas Seibert, Foreign Correspondent

    The National
    http://www.thenational.ae/article/2009011 9/FOREIGN/630244377/-1/NEWS
    Jan 19 2009
    United Arab Emirates

    Hrant Dink's funeral procession was attended by thousands who showed
    solidarity with the slain journalist.

    ISTANBUL // Hrant Dink, a prominent Turkish journalist of Armenian
    descent, was walking back from a bank errand to the office of
    his newspaper Agos in a busy Istanbul shopping district one Friday
    afternoon two years ago, when a young man stepped up from behind and
    shot him in the head and the neck.

    As Dink lay dead on the pavement and a crowd of shocked passers-by
    and friends gathered around the body that had been quickly covered
    with a blanket, it became clear immediately that the murder was a
    defining moment for Turkey.

    Television stations interrupted their normal programmes to report
    on the killing, and the government in Ankara broke off a cabinet
    meeting to dispatch two ministers to Istanbul to watch over the
    investigation. A few days later, tens of thousands of people joined
    the funeral march for Dink, carrying signs that read: "We are all
    Armenians." Turkey had never seen anything like it.

    Even though radical Turkish nationalists had long regarded Dink as a
    traitor because he wanted Turkey to face up to the massacres against
    the Armenians in the First World War and called for a reconciliation
    between Turks and Armenians, the murder came as a shock for the
    country. Nationalists had brought Dink, the outspoken editor of Agos,
    and other intellectuals to court for expressing their views about
    the Armenian question, but the killing crossed a line. Dink himself,
    in his last column for Agos, had compared himself to a dove: "I know
    that in this country no one will hurt a dove."

    Two years after the shots that were fired on Jan 19, 2007, Turkey is
    still haunted by the murder, but the debate about what happened to
    Armenians almost 100 years ago is much more open than before. Several
    hundred thousand Anatolian Armenians perished in massacres and death
    marches that started in 1915. Turkey says the deaths were the unwanted
    results of a relocation move under wartime conditions.

    Armenia and many international scholars say that up to 1.5 million
    people were victims of a genocide.

    "The funeral march was a turning point," said Aydin Engin, a
    Turkish journalist who briefly took over as editor of Agos after the
    murder. "Many Turks were forced to think: what happened in 1915? Was
    there a genocide or not? People recognised there is a problem."

    The probing is new for Turkey, where public talk about the Armenian
    question was long considered taboo and can result in jail sentences
    even today. Mr Engin, who is not of Armenian descent, said he still
    receives many e-mails from high school and university students asking
    him to explain what happened to the Armenians.

    "The taboo has been broken for good," Mr Engin said. "People talk
    about it in coffee houses, in their families."

    Shortly after the murder, police caught the confessed killer, Ogun
    Samast, a teenager from the Black Sea city of Trabzon, which is known
    as a nationalist stronghold. The trial against Mr Samast and several
    other defendants accused of incitement or of being accomplices
    continues in court in Istanbul. It has kept the case of Dink on
    the agenda.

    Friends and family members meet today for a remembrance march from
    Taksim Square in Istanbul's city centre to the scene of the crime in
    front of the building that houses Agos.

    Ever since the killing, the government has been under public pressure
    to investigate reports that those guilty acted with the knowledge of
    leading police officers. When Mr Samast was arrested, some policemen
    posed with him and a Turkish flag for souvenir photos. Only a few
    days ago, Turkish media reported that Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the
    prime minister, had given permission to open investigations against
    two high-ranking police officers who are accused of having ignored
    information about the plot to kill Dink.

    Still, Armenians in Turkey feel exposed. This month, police in the
    central Anatolian city of Sivas arrested about a dozen nationalists
    after discovering a plot to kill a leader of the local Armenian
    community. The plot is said to have been ordered by members of the
    Ergenekon organisation, a right-wing group that prosecutors say tried
    to provoke a military coup against Mr Erdogan by creating chaos in
    the country with the help of terrorist attacks and assassinations.

    Fethiye Cetin, a lawyer for Dink's family in the murder trial, has
    claimed that there are "very strong connections" between the Ergenekon
    gang and the killing of Dink.

    "Right now every Armenian can feel like a target," Dink's brother
    Orhan told the Sabah newspaper last week.

    Mr Engin said every time the Armenian question receives heightened
    publicity, Armenians felt under threat by nationalists.
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