Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Muslims Want Justice For Dink...

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Muslims Want Justice For Dink...

    MUSLIMS WANT JUSTICE FOR DINK...

    Today's Zaman
    Aug 8 2012
    Turkey

    When Hrant Dink was killed by a 17-year-old boy on Jan. 19, 2007,
    we felt utterly miserable for losing our healer, one who was adept
    at repairing the ties of many Armenians like me and "others" with
    our country. It was Dink who discovered me as an author and backed
    me at all times and motivated me with his exemplary attitude. He was
    a frank, bold, smart and conscientious man: a man of Anatolia.

    He had given up his comfortable and affluent life in order to put an
    end to the self-isolation of Armenians. The reason he published Agos
    in both Armenian and Turkish was that he wanted to make two peoples,
    Armenians and Turks, know each other, remember an age-old fraternity
    and come together again. I worked with him at the same paper for 10
    years. Those were hard and dangerous days, but not even once did I
    feel that his faith in this country had waned. He never produced a
    prejudiced sentence.

    At 3 p.m. on that black day on Jan. 19, hearing of the loss of such a
    loved one, I thought I witnessed what real hell was in this world. But
    I wanted to go and see his body and be with him. I can't lie to you,
    at the time I thought, "Were we wrong? Were Hrant, myself and all of
    us more optimistic about this country than we should have been?"

    The same doubts were creeping into my mind as I looked at the thousands
    of people who had gathered in front of Agos that evening. I continued
    to ask myself: "We are fighting in vain. How many people are there
    in this country who believe in fraternity, equality and peace?

    Can we still nurture hopes for a country which fails to protect a
    man of peace like Hrant?"

    I knew such sorrows might be experienced anywhere, but the struggle
    for upholding goodness must continue. Yet the ember had already fallen
    in our house.

    When I got to Agos on the day of the funeral, my doubts had flown
    away. At least 100,000 or perhaps 200,000 people had come to pay their
    final respects to Hrant and protest against the murderers: Armenians,
    Turks, Kurds, Muslims, leftists, foreigners, people from Armenia,
    headscarved women, those who sounded zılgıts (a form of ululating).

    Just to experience this moment to the fullest, I walked together with
    my family and friends among the crowd from Agos to Yenikapı. Oddly
    enough, I felt like an honored citizen for the first time. The deep
    state, i.e., Ergenekon -- a clandestine organization nested within the
    state trying to overthrow or manipulate the democratically elected
    government -- might have murdered Hrant, but the enthusiasm, rage
    and belief in fraternity of the people were greater than everything.

    The murder case went badly. Actually, everything was crystal clear.

    The state had been involved in the design, committing and covering
    up, i.e., all stages of the murder. The state had intertwined with
    the deeper structure in terms of negligence and premeditation. It is
    exactly for this reason the case did not progress as it should and
    ended up being a fiasco.

    Turkey is trying to confront its deep state. But this is not as easy as
    it may seem. Old habits, the prevalence of pro-Ergenekon people within
    the bureaucracy, and the continuation of the old state's mentality
    make things hard for reformists. Indeed, it is for this reason the
    government did not throw its weight behind the case. There are people
    who seek to protect the old state or to fight with it when it attempts
    to attack them and make do when it comes to agreement with them.

    As the case was moving towards becoming a fiasco, and after the
    European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) found Turkey in violation of
    several articles in the European Convention on Human Rights concerning
    how it handled the case, President Abdullah Gul told the inspectors
    of the State Audit Institution (DDK) to examine the Dink murder. The
    DDK came up with a valuable report. This was a historic report which
    revealed the state's practice of "lack of punishment."

    On Aug. 6, Hrant's Muslim friends met Mr. Gul. The meeting lasted for
    an hour. Omer Faruk Gergerlioglu, Hilal Kaplan and Cemal UÅ~_Å~_ak,
    too, attended the meeting. They asked for Gul's continued support
    for solving the murder. Gul is really a very valuable statesman. He
    has stated that he has been unable to idly take in the Dink murder
    and that the state has responsibility for it.

    He noted that he can understand the problems of non-Muslim religious
    minorities in Turkey as he closely monitored Muslim communities
    in other countries when he was foreign minister. He indicated that
    according to the DDK's report, the inevitability of the Dink murder was
    clear and that made him sorry. "The reports prepared upon instruction
    by the president will not be shelved," he said, stressing that he
    would make the necessary follow-up if the report went unnoticed.

    We hope the efforts of Gul and the We Demand Justice Union will
    be productive.

Working...
X