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ANKARA: Covering Up Dink: 'Crime, Denial And Conscience'

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  • ANKARA: Covering Up Dink: 'Crime, Denial And Conscience'

    COVERING UP DINK: 'CRIME, DENIAL AND CONSCIENCE'
    by Alin Ozinian

    Today's Zaman
    Jan 19 2012
    Turkey

    I can never forget the day that Hrant Dink was shot; despite the
    seemingly unending period between his shooting and actual dying,
    that day was strangely short.

    Though people said Hrant had been "shot," it was on that day that I
    came to understand that "shot" really meant "dead."

    He fell to the ground. He was heading to the bank. He had a hole in his
    shoes, which was revealed in photographs from the scene. He was a poor
    orphan when he was a little boy. Hrant was shot by a youth wearing
    a white beret. People near the scene of the murder covered Hrant's
    dead body with some sheets of newspaper. Candles were placed where
    the shooting occurred and lots of people went to the spot to visit.

    In fact a surprising number of people came. They cried. There was a
    mixture of fear, protest and hope. Scores of people loudly insisted,
    "Hrant was my brother." It was clear that this murder needed to be
    pursued, that the truth would be illuminated in the end. We all saw
    the youth wearing the beret on the news who asserted, "He was an
    Armenian; I killed him." Later this same youth became some sort of
    hero, with people photographing him standing in front of the Turkish
    flag. Some even called him a "dutiful son." Many people wrote about
    him. Some said we had shot ourselves; there was much talk of the great
    loss. But there were also those who said, "That man [Hrant] said we
    committed genocide, and while people attend his funeral, they don't
    go to the funerals of our fallen soldiers." There was so much said,
    so many voices talking. As he lay there on the ground, they covered
    him in newspapers. We waited for things to be illuminated. Five years
    passed. Nothing was illuminated.

    When the bill accepting the term "Armenian genocide" arrived in the
    French Parliament in the mid-2000s, Hrant was very persuasive in
    arguing that it had to be dealt with, saying, "I will break this law
    in France." At the same time he began to use the word "genocide" on
    television programs to which he was invited as a guest, and he also
    wrote long texts on how Mustafa Kemal Ataturk's adopted daughter was
    an "Armenian." As Fethiye Cetin once noted, "It was as though the
    outlines of this case were drawn from the very beginning." And the
    truth is that it was clear what would happen even before the murder.

    In fact, the İstanbul deputy governor called Hrant to his offices to
    warn him sharply. At the governor's office, two National Intelligence
    Organization (MİT) agents -- one of whom was a woman -- casually
    threatened him. Later, these people were never asked to account
    for their actions. Hrant was also convicted under Article 301 of the
    Turkish Penal Code (TCK) before he died. He received countless letters
    threatening him. In an interview I conducted one month before he was
    killed, he said he had been picked as a target by the "deep state."

    And he was, in fact, killed.

    The Dink case never went forward

    Despite the passage of time following Dink's murder, the case itself
    never moved forward. Even though there were great efforts to add two
    more suspects to the 18 who were originally on trial, only the 18 were
    punished when the case came to a close after five years. And somehow
    there was no success finding the very force that actually ordered the
    trigger to be pulled as part of this murderous plan, whose foundation
    was so filthy. Despite this, there was some hope at the beginning
    because this murder was unlike previous ones that took the lives of
    quiet journalists, and it was also unlike any base plot to massacre
    "some Armenian." It was an engineered project, the structure and very
    existence of which endangered both the government and the system. And
    this time the government was not an extension of the state to which
    we were accustomed, but rather a direct victim of the system itself.

    The government was aware of the traps set for it and so this case
    could have gone forward. But it did not. Around the time when Hrant was
    killed, many people were threatened. There were coup plots made against
    the government and weapons that had been buried underground were being
    discovered. It was the exact same period of time when the secretive
    and "deep" mentality that had been imposed on real political will for
    so long needed to be uprooted, and the transformation we thought had
    begun in the country needed to be finished. As we were filled with
    hope that the system we wanted to believe in would be changed, the
    system actually wound up changing our beliefs. There were no ties found
    between organized terror and those who had been arrested as suspects
    for the murder of Hrant. And so the case surrounding a murder which
    we are meant to believe was carried out by three brainwashed youths
    took five years to come to an end.

    While the case proceedings and hearings were rather hopeless, it was
    never as shocking as the actual final result. "Institutions" were
    protected, MİT agents were not questioned, and telephone records
    were never delivered to the court, with the exception of some very
    sparse recordings. At the request of the İstanbul Public Prosecutor,
    these tapes and the conversations they contained were examined, but
    nothing was found. Still, Hrant Dink's lawyers did what they could and
    presented to the court evidence showing that on the day of the murder,
    at the time of the murder, five different telephone numbers located in
    that district made contact with the actual triggerman. The prosecutor
    was sure that the murder had been carried out by the Trabzon leg of
    Ergenekon, and that case was combined with the main case, but still
    nothing was illuminated.

    There was no investigation of Ergenekon, nothing and nobody was really
    uncovered. Political will did not make all institutions available to
    illuminate this case. With this murder, there was a desire to finish
    off, to drown it in the Ogun Samast-Yasin Hayal-Erhan Tuncel axis of
    evil, and that is what was done. The sheer surprise and shock at seeing
    this much effort put into ensuring the trial only revolved around
    these three triggermen -- and nothing more -- is incomprehensible.

    Denial' more dangerous than we thought

    After losing Hrant I began to understand just how dangerous denial
    really is, and on the day that Hrant's trial came to a so-called end,
    I really felt how deeply "denying" things has become a part of us. It
    feels as though we have lost Hrant once more. After the case was over,
    I felt I would like to see denial accepted as a crime so we don't
    lose more people.

    I wonder how many of us are aware of the events that have occurred
    which led to the law in France, and how many of us can imagine the
    real despair created by the reflex of denial that we come face to face
    with in Turkey every day? We must accept that such laws are enforced
    not only for political reasons, but also to undercut the thesis of
    "official denial." There are dirty pages that mark the histories of
    every country, and bloody-handed leaders whose terms mar the histories
    of their countries.

    But today people have taken steps to release themselves from the weight
    of their pasts, and they do not cling onto denial like some sort of
    life preserver. The Socialist Party in France, which itself was the
    one to prepare the genocide denial law, took an important step by
    apologizing for the massacre and tossing of the bodies of Algerian
    protesters killed in Paris in 1961 into the River Seine. This was
    reminiscent of how the Bulgarian Parliament condemned the assimilation
    policies imposed on Turkish and Muslim citizens earlier in the century,
    and how it demanded those guilty for crimes of this nature should
    be punished.

    The milestone for "denial" itself occurred in 1915. And all of the
    injustices, murders and the roots of the insensitivities we experience
    today actually go much, much deeper. No one with any sense at all has
    claimed that "they didn't kill Armenians in Turkey in 1915," although
    there are all sorts of alternative pieces of rhetoric out there. For
    example, "they died from the effects of the flu while being exiled,"
    or "they got extremely cold and then they just died." There is also
    the claim that "we were provoked and they also killed Turks." This
    stance is as far from sincerity and respect for death as a claim that
    Hrant himself killed a child.

    What possible connection could a woman cooking lavash in her village,
    or a baby sleeping soundly in its crib, have with Armenian gangs
    out to kill Turks? I won't even talk about innocent men, as they had
    their weapons taken away long before the events, and were sent far
    from their homes.

    The first "mechanism of elimination" formed in Turkey began in 1915;
    the foundations for the very "social engineering" which we decry
    these days were being laid at that time. The Turkish Republic, the
    historic heir to the Ottoman Empire, never faced up to history, which
    would set us all free. And this never-taken step will only continue
    to wrap itself tighter and tighter around our ankles, while the real
    killer of Hrant continues to evade justice. And as we continue denial,
    things will only become more and more tangled and complicated.

    Conscience

    In the meantime, no one thinks about how we could heal justice and
    all the consciences that need healing. Instead, in response to the
    French decision, people in Ankara are busy preparing bills that propose
    changing Paris Boulevard in Ankara to Algeria Boulevard, in order to
    show how we share the pain of the cruelty experienced by our Algerian
    brothers in the 20th century at the hands of the French. There is
    also a proposal to switch the name of De Gaulle Boulevard with the
    name of one of the national heroes of Algeria, and a plan to put up
    a memorial for the Algerian genocide in a city square somewhere.

    Dink was never really loved by Armenians in the diaspora, or by Armenia
    itself. Perhaps this is because they didn't understand him, and people
    tend not to love things or people they don't understand. At the same
    time it now appears that the very thought or proposal of putting up
    a statue or a monument in memory of Hrant -- a man who declared his
    intention to be buried in this soil, who never thought of running away
    to another country no matter what threats he received, who challenged
    other Armenians when he deemed it necessary, who defended Turkey
    fiercely -- has never been brought to the agenda. No one in Ankara
    or anywhere else has brought such a proposal to the fore; they found
    other ways of trying to make the pain felt by their Armenian brothers
    pass, calling those who had been forcibly relocated "the extremist
    nationalist diaspora" and accepting quiet minority communities in
    İstanbul as "harmless Christians."

    We will all bear the brunt of the Dink case coming to this sort of
    closure, as the country we had always imagined is once more postponed.

    This business is no longer just an "Ergenekon" or an "anti-Armenian"
    case, but has been transformed into a matter of reckoning with the
    conscience. Though it is difficult to say, we have turned into a
    country whose very institutions, people, stances and consciences have
    been rusted and blunted. It is now clear that our consciences have
    actually been damaged for years; the result of this case is official
    proof of this.

    The 100-year story of our denial is being wrapped up neatly. But
    won't it pain us at all that the punishments allotted in this case we
    have followed for five years have been given to just three people,
    and the second and third links in the chain of crime were so easily
    hidden and made secret? Are our consciences really that damaged? How
    will we be able to sleep soundly after this? We still cling to our
    answers, hoping as we look to the future, and refusing to let go of
    this hope, even if there is nearly no longer any reason to cling to
    it. The moment the case closed, the struggle picked up once again,
    as Rakel Dink noted, and everyone will do everything they can to
    illuminate the same darkness that created a murderer out of a youth.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    *Alin Ozinian is an independent analyst.

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