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  • Turkey Remembers Murdered Journalist

    TURKEY REMEMBERS MURDERED JOURNALIST
    By Ivan Watson, CNN

    CNN International
    Jan 19 2012

    Istanbul (CNN) -- A crowd estimated at more than 10,000 people marched
    silently on a bitterly cold day through downtown Istanbul Thursday
    to commemorate the five year anniversary of the murder of an ethnic
    Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

    They walked carrying a sea of black signs declaring "We are all Hrant,
    we are all Armenian," written in Turkish and Armenian.

    Police, who put the crowd estimate at 10,000 or more, blocked off
    traffic as the crowds moved towards the offices of the Armenian
    language Agos newspaper.

    On January 19, 2007, Dink, the newspaper's editor in chief, was
    gunned down in broad daylight on the sidewalk outside the newspaper's
    offices. Dink, in the opinion of observers, had been an eloquent
    spokesman for Turkey's tiny minority of Armenians.

    A 17-year-old Turkish ultra nationalist soccer player was caught with
    the murder weapon and later convicted of the killing.

    But on Tuesday an Istanbul court attracted condemnation from members
    of the Dink family as well as human rights groups when 19 suspected
    accomplices in the murder where all acquitted of charges of being
    members of a terrorist organization that plotted the assassination.

    "The verdict was not only a travesty of justice, it shows our justice
    system is simply political and does not work," said newspaper columnist
    Asli Aydintasbas, as she marched along with her mother and thousands
    of others up Istanbul's Cumhuriyet Caddesi, the broad boulevard where
    Dink was shot dead.

    "So many journalists are in jail charged with terrorism only because
    of their writing," Aydintasbas added, "whereas the actual guys
    who killed a journalist and who had clear connections with state
    officials... they're not charged with terrorism. Some are even let go."

    According to the Turkish Journalists Union there are currently more
    than 90 media workers behind bars, many of them facing charges of
    alleged membership in terrorist organizations and coup plots to
    overthrow the government.

    A Parliament member from Turkey's ruling party added to the chorus
    of criticism Thursday in a newspaper column describing the trial as a
    "disgrace."

    "Apart from offending our civic conscience and eroding our limited
    trust in justice in this country, Tuesday's verdict is also an insult
    to this nation's intelligence," wrote lawmaker Suat Kiniklioglu in
    the English-language Today's Zaman. "Despite the clear evidence
    that confirms links with state officials both before and after
    Hrant's murder, it is clear that the deep state wants this link to
    be covered up."

    "Deep state" is the term many Turks use to refer to alleged criminal
    networks within security forces and the government bureaucracy.

    Many members of the crowd of thousands carrying portraits of Dink on
    Thursday chanted "fascist state."

    Before his murder Dink was on trial for "insulting Turkishness" because
    he referred to the World War I-era massacre of hundreds of thousands
    of ethnic Armenian as genocide. The Turkish government vehemently
    rejects using that term to refer to that bloody chapter of history.

    But while attracting the anger of Turkish ultra-nationalists, Dink
    was also outspoken in his defense of freedom of speech. Three months
    before his murder, Dink gave an interview to U.S. National Public
    Radio, in which he argued against a proposed law in France to make
    the denial of the Armenian genocide a crime.

    "Those who use this Armenian issue as a political tool are massacring
    my people over and over again," Dink said.

    In that October 2006 interview, Dink also warned that he had received
    multiple death threats.

    According to a prosecutor's indictment, within days of Dink's
    shooting, the chief murder suspect Ogun Samast, was caught by police
    in possession of the murder weapon and the white knit hat that he was
    filmed wearing by a security camera, positioned on the street where
    Dink was killed.

    After he was detained, several Turkish police officers filmed
    themselves treating Samast like a hero. A video that was later widely
    re-broadcast on Turkish television networks showed the officers
    posing alongside Samast, after positioning him prominently in front
    of a Turkish flag.

    Watch video at
    http://edition.cnn.com/2012/01/19/world/meast/turkey-journalist-anniversary/?hpt=ieu_c2




    From: A. Papazian
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