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ANKARA: Hrant for ever

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  • ANKARA: Hrant for ever

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    Sept 19 2010


    Hrant for ever

    Sunday, September 19, 2010
    JOOST LAGENDIJK

    Last week there was no escape. Hrant Dink dominated the
    post-referendum news. First, the European Court of Human Rights, or
    ECHR, delivered its damning verdict in the Dink versus Turkey case.
    The same day, Tuba Çandar presented her book `Hrant' and one day
    later, on Sept. 15, his family and friends met to celebrate his
    birthday and to witness the presentation of the 2010 International
    Hrant Dink Awards.

    The award ceremony was impressive, for several reasons. Together with
    Jan. 19, the day he was killed, it has become one of the two moments
    each year to commemorate his murder in 2007. Of course there was
    sadness, in the minds of those present, in the genes of the meeting.
    Sorrow about the loss of this remarkable person and frustration
    because of the fact that his ongoing murder trial seems to be leading
    nowhere. At the same time, there is the conviction that he will not be
    forgotten and the determination to preserve the spirit of his fights
    for ideals and his capacity to encourage others. This year was the
    second time that the awards were presented. The domestic price went to
    the movement of conscientious objectors in Turkey, a small but growing
    organization of people who refuse to serve in the Turkish army. Faced
    with persecution, conviction and torture, fighting an uphill struggle
    for better treatment and new regulations for conscientious objectors.
    The second award winner was Baltasar Garzon, the Spanish judge who
    became famous around the world because of his efforts to bring the
    Chilean junta leader Pinochet and Argentine military officers
    responsible for the killing of thousands of civilians during the
    1976-1983 dictatorship to court. After he initiated an investigation
    into crimes committed during the Franco regime in Spain, a case was
    opened against him and at the moment he is still suspended from his
    duties. Garzon is a living example of the many courageous people
    around the globe who take personal risks to work for a better world.
    The awards are there to show that they are not alone and to motivate
    everyone to fight for their ideals, using the language of peace.

    That is exactly what Hrant was so good at. One is reminded of that
    special quality when reading Tuba Çandar's book. The author has not
    tried to write a classic biography. What she did was gather hundreds
    of recollections and impressions from people who knew Hrant and
    combine them with fragments from articles and speeches by Hrant
    himself. The result is a rich mosaic that superbly manages to bring to
    life the many facets of Hrant: from the leftist, activist and defender
    of Armenian rights to the tender friend and the haunted citizen.

    The many mistakes made by the Turkish state in dealing with Hrant were
    all unveiled in the ECHR judgment. Turkey was found guilty on all
    counts, which includes violation of `the right to life' and freedom of
    expression. The court also found that Turkey has not managed to
    investigate and prosecute those responsible for these failures, a
    breach of duties that continues till this day because of the way the
    case against Hrant's murderers has been mishandled. In fact, the ECHR
    has ordered Turkey to carry out a new and effective investigation into
    the role of state officials connected with the case. That is good news
    for the Dink family and their lawyers, who almost lost faith in the
    possibility of upholding the law.

    The Turkish state will pay financial compensation. But that should
    only be the start of a fundamental revision of policy that should,
    first and foremost, aim to remove the obstacles standing in the way of
    trying all those responsible for Hrant's murder. In the long run
    though, this is not enough. The ideology that led Turkish courts to
    deliberately distort Hrant's statements, thereby making him a target
    for ultranationalist groups, has to be skipped from the books and the
    minds of the Turkish judiciary. The same goes for all those articles
    restricting freedom of expression that still exist in several laws.
    Only by carrying out these vital reforms, will the Turkish state be
    able to comply with the legal obligations coming from Europe and with
    the moral imperatives related to Hrant's death.

    The 2010 awards show that Hrant's spirit is alive in the actions of
    others, all around the world, and in the minds of those who worked
    with him. Let's hope last week's events will also lead to the
    redrafting of the state policies that victimized Hrant and so many
    others in Turkey. Only then will his legacy be complete.




    From: A. Papazian
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