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ANKARA: Hrant's Friends panel speakers highlight how minorities feel

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  • ANKARA: Hrant's Friends panel speakers highlight how minorities feel

    Cihan News Agency (CNA) - Turkey
    January 13, 2013 Sunday


    Hrant's Friends panel speakers highlight how minorities feel threatened



    ISTANBUL (CIHAN)- A number of panelists who spoke as part of a two-day
    symposium organized by Hrant's Friends to recall events that led to
    the 2007 murder of Hrant Dink, editor-in-chief of the Turkish-Armenian
    weekly Agos, said on Sunday that minorities, including Armenian
    citizens, feel threatened in Turkey because of a series of minor and
    major attacks on them.

    Hayko Bagdat, a member of the Armenian community and host of a
    television show, said at the panel "Minorities Targeted: Cage Plot"
    that before Dink's murder there had been systematic threats and
    attacks against minority communities and now similar attacks continue
    though on a minor scale.

    Bagdat gave some recent examples causing fear among the Armenian
    community: an elderly Armenian woman who was killed in Samatya and the
    slaughter of a teacher who was not an Armenian but worked at an
    Armenian school.

    "Are these isolated events?" Bagdat asked. "Maybe they are in this big
    city where murders happen every day, but if we have doubts, that means
    that they are serious."

    Among other disturbing examples, Bagdat also mentioned the murder of
    Sevag Balikçi, a young man of Armenian descent who was killed while
    serving in the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) as a conscripted private.
    His death was initially believed to be an accident but was likely a
    hate crime committed because of the victim's ethnic background,
    according to new testimony from another private. Balikçi was shot dead
    on April 24, 2011 -- the date the Armenian Diaspora has chosen to
    commemorate the incidents of 1915 when hundreds of Armenians were
    killed in the Ottoman Empire.

    He also highlighted the Cage Operation Action Plan, allegedly prepared
    by the Naval Forces Command, which sought to intimidate and
    assassinate Turkey's prominent non-Muslim figures to put domestic and
    international pressure on the government. The plan calls the killings
    of Dink, Catholic priest Father Andrea Santoro and three Christians in
    Malatya an "operation." An anti-democratic group within the Naval
    Forces Command allegedly aimed at fomenting chaos in society with
    those killings, but evidence showed that the plan failed when large
    groups protested the killings in mass demonstrations in Turkey.

    In 2010, an indictment regarding the Cage Operation Action Plan was
    added to the case file on the 2007 Malatya murders, in which three
    missionaries were brutally killed at a Christian publishing house.

    Orhan Kemal Cengiz, a lawyer representing the plaintiffs in the
    Malatya murder case, said at the same panel that there are pieces of
    information that the public has about all those events, but it is hard
    to put them together and see the whole picture.

    Speaking about his own experience, he said that even he was being
    targeted by a suspect in the murder case before he was put in prison.
    "I was afraid because there was news circulating that I had a role in
    the murders. All that had a chilling effect on the other lawyers in
    the case," he said.

    Cengiz also reminded that a suspect standing trial in the Malatya
    massacre case told the court that the National Strategies and
    Operations Department of Turkey (TUSHAD), the armed wing of the
    Ergenekon crime network, is still active and continues to plot attacks
    against non-Muslims.
    In addition, he pointed out the revelation of a letter sent by an
    anonymous writer to the National Intelligence Organization (MIT)
    claiming that the Tactical Mobilization Group (STK) of the General
    Staff was behind a number of assassinations, including an armed attack
    on the Council of State in 2006, the murder of Dink and the Malatya
    killings.

    "The letter also claimed that the STK has three main branches: one in
    the northern province of Trabzon, one in southern Hatay and the other
    in the eastern province of Malatya," he added.

    Journalist Ismail Saymaz, writer of the book, "Nefret/Malatya: Bir
    Milli Mutabakat Cinayeti" (Hate/Malatya: A Murder of National
    Consensus), said at the same panel that people should not blame the
    "deep state" behind every act because the ruling Justice and
    Development party (AK Party), which does not show enough political
    will behind those serious murder investigations and even promotes
    major suspects who hold official positions, is also a responsible
    party in the big picture. He also said that anybody that is not a
    male, Sunni Turk in Turkey does not feel as if they have full
    citizenship rights.




    From: A. Papazian
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