ROA NSC has not coop’d with Halilov convicted in Baku for espionage

PanARMENIAN.Net

Armenian NSC has not cooperated with Halilov convicted in Baku for espionage
30.01.2007 14:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The National Security Council of Armenia denies the
accusations on cooperating with Georgian citizen Ariz Halilov, who
just the other days was convicted for espionage in favor of Armenia
and planning terror acts, the NSC Press Office reports. According to
the report, Sadakhlo resident Halilov’s activity, who was trading in
border market, is artificially exaggerated by Baku, which ascribes to
him `exclusive abilities’ and intentions to organize blasts in oil and
gas infrastructure and other large objects in Baku.

`Most probably the Azeri authorities are seriously concerned about the
information, which was spread on last December 20, on detaining and
sentencing one more agent,’ the Armenian NSC reports.

The other days a legal procedure finished in Baku on Azeri Ariz
Halilov case, who is Georgian citizen and `was cooperating with
Armenian Secret Services against Azerbaijan.’ On the heavy crimes
court decision Ariz Halilov was sentenced to 14-year imprisonment.

Azerbaijan president does not rule out use of force to seize NK

International Herald Tribune, France
Jan 29 2007

Report: Azerbaijan president does not rule out use of force to seize
Nagorno-Karabakh

PARIS (AP) – Azerbaijan’s president said he prefers a peaceful
solution to a dispute with Armenia over the enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh, but is not ruling out military means, a French
newspaper reported Monday.

President Ilham Aliev, in an interview in Le Monde daily before
arriving in France for a three-day visit, was quoted as saying the
disputed enclave is "issue No. 1" for his oil-rich Caucasus Mountains
country, which is growing bolder as its economic strength grows.

"It’s clear that our political weight will give us one day the means
to liberate our lands," he was quoted as saying. "We’d prefer to do
it peacefully, without going to war. But if there are no other means
… we’ll see."

Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous territory inside Azerbaijan but
populated by Armenians, has been controlled by ethnic Armenian forces
since the end of a six-year war in 1994. Tensions remain high between
Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Diplomats from Russia, France and the United States have headed more
than a decade of efforts by the so-called Minsk Group – part of the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe – to resolve the
Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

In a statement Monday, the group said it was encouraged by what it
called the "constructive" approach of the leaders of Armenia and
Azerbaijan as they work toward resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict.

Azerbaijan has been building up its military with an influx of
revenues from oil. It controls portions of the Caspian Sea, on its
eastern fringe, which has some of the largest oil and gas fields in
the former Soviet Union.

Aliev, who was to meet Monday with French President Jacques Chirac,
was quoted as telling Le Monde that he was looking to deepen
bilateral economic ties between Azerbaijan and France.

Iran-Armenia gas pipeline to go on stream in spring – official

RIA Novosti, Russia
Jan 29 2007

Iran-Armenia gas pipeline to go on stream in spring – official
14:14 | 29/ 01/ 2007

YEREVAN, January 29 (RIA Novosti) – A natural gas pipeline linking
Iran and Armenia will be put into operation this coming spring, a
spokesman for the Armenian president said Monday.

The construction of the 141-kilometer (90-mile) pipeline from Iran
began in 2004. It has a price tag of about $210-220 million,
including $120 million for the Armenian section.

"The gas pipeline will be commissioned this spring. Only then will it
be possible to say whether it will be a transit system. In any case,
Yerevan has always been guided by considerations of economic
expediency. Economic projects that had a political subtext have
always been rejected by the Armenian authorities," Viktor Sogomonyan
said.

Under the current agreement, Iran is to deliver 36 billion cubic
meters of natural gas to Armenia over the next 20 years, subject to a
possible five-year extension and an increase in deliveries to 47
billion cubic meters.

Armenia plans to use all of the gas to produce electricity for
subsequent export to Iran, as well as for domestic consumption.

Book on Ethiopia inspired by dream

Inspire Magazine, UK
Jan 27 2007

Book on Ethiopia inspired by dream

A Buckinghamshire author whose first non-fiction book was inspired by
a dream, is using it to help raise funds for clean water and
sanitation projects in Ethiopia.

In her dream Annette Allen was back in the foothills of Addis Ababa
where she went to school and had bent down to feel the dry topsoil.
As she did so she knew she was there to help provide water for
Ethiopia’s poor. Two years later, Annette was made redundant from her
job as a corporate communications manager and vowed to make her dream
come true.

The result is An Ethiopian Odysssey about her journey to find nine
classmates from Nazareth School for Girls in Addis Ababa and to
discover what had happened to them since she last saw them in July
1964. The book includes interviews with four school friends,
including the granddaughter of Emperor Haile Selassie. It also
recounts stories about the Queen, Princess Anne, the Armenian
genocide, Ethiopia’s first big famine in 1973, wars and more recent
events such as the 9/11 World Trade Centre attacks in New York and
the Commission for Africa.

Half of the royalties from each book will go to three charities:
WaterAid, who have worked in Ethiopia since 1983, AGOHELD, a charity
run by Abebech Gobena, the `Mother Theresa of Africa and Christian
Aid’s Middle East crisis appeal.

`This has been a truly wonderful journey, with amazing connections
and synchronicity,’ says Annette, a committed Christian. `I’ve
experienced the kindness and hospitality of many strangers in
different countries who wanted to help me make my dream come true.

`In Ethiopia, I saw for myself how permanent clean water has a major
impact on the quality of people’s lives: especially for women and
girls, along with the family’s health, income and self-esteem. Having
clean water on tap means an end to water-borne diseases, and the
long, daily walks to bring water to their family. Water is, indeed,
life.’

on=view&id=780

http://www.inspiremagazine.org.uk/news.aspx?acti

Are We All Armenians?

Are We All Armenians?
by M. Nedim Hazar
Today’s Zaman
Jan. 27, 2007

.do?haberno=3D101236

Let’s put aside all the questions, conspiracy theories (whether
reasonable or not), the alarming social point reached in recent
days. And let’s leave aside the sad and heartbreaking nature of the
murder for a moment. Let’s also temporarily shelve all the debates and
cross-talk and the fanatical racismbeing incited in youth under the
mask of "nationalism" prior to Hrant Dink’s murder?

Let’s have some mental exercises on the scene that appeared at Dink’s
funeral.

As the murderer admitted himself, nobody could have known this murder
would give rise to such great indignation. I think nobody would have
guessed that such a wide and strong social reaction would occur.

It is beyond argument that what happened on Tuesday was an
impressive. The Turkish people’s desire to say "no more" to some
dangers that have been accumulating was effective, as well as who Dink
was as a person and as a symbol.

Maybe the large funeral procession was a delayed show of support from
the masses for the victims who had eggs thrown at them outside court a
few months ago I think we the Turks are a lot more emotional and
hotheaded than other nations. Both our anger and compassion might be
volatile much of the time.

And especially when our passions rise, we might lose our balance.

You understand now: I’m going to talk about the placards reading "We
are all Armenians. We are all Hrant Dink."

Surely nobody understands these messages literally, as meaning an
expression of identity. Please keep in mind that I personally did not
miss the message it contains — the funeral procession was certainly a
meaningful response to that attack, which was sneaky, vile, stupid or
whatever you call it.

However all this does not justify perverting the facts.

"We are emotional," I said, but the Turkish media is a more emotional
than the Turkish people.

I want to say that I found the attitude of the Turkish media after the
assassination to be "exaggerated." Up until now, they have been
quicker than anyone to drown many liberal ideas and have outdone the
state in terms of limiting rights and freedoms. It is certainly
admirable that the media condemned and put a spotlight on such a
traitorous murder, without stooping to cheap and tabloid tactics —
however, it is still excessive.

The placards reading "We are all Armenians" make the issue more
complicated rather than providing a solution to it.

I am sure Hrant Dink would be disturbed as well. "Inappropriate," he
would say. "You do not need to become Armenians, it is better if you
just live together with Armenians as brethren." Someone like him who
had devoted hislife to ending the mutual hostility between Turks and
Armenians would, I believe, be opposed to a psychological mood
resulting from an emotional trauma becoming continuous and permanent.

The problem is not Armenians being Turkish — or not — so that the
solution would be making Turks Armenians! The cause Dink fought for
was to make it possible to accept others with their own identities and
understand one another.

The Armenian problem can’t be resolved by us becoming Hrant. Everyone
should know that we won’t have gotten rid of the "Armenian genocide"
problem even if we announce to the whole world that we are
Armenians. We are wrong if we believe that problems can be solved by
shouting slogans or holding placards at a funeral. Moreover, I am
becoming disturbed with the exaggerations of the media.

Yes, I am not Armenian, and I don’t think Hrant Dink would want anyone
to "become Armenian." Wisdom is not wishing to become "the other" but
managing to prevent creation of "the other."This style is not the cure
to the racist mentality that throws eggs and tomatoes at intellectuals
in front of houses of justice. But it might be an exaggeration
amounting to a similar conclusion.

I would expect all those who made and held those placards, first of
all in the media, to take the side of all those who were unjustly
treated. I don’t know, maybe like "All of us are Elif Safak" or "All
of us wear headscarves" — that sort of protest.

And wisdom is doing it before people die.

Or we’ll just keep talking and commenting in vain, and it will not
change anything.

[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])

http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/yazarDetay

Trabzon governor, police chief removed from office due to murder

People’s Daily Online, China
Jan 26 2007

Trabzon governor, police chief removed from office due to
journalist’s killing

Governor Huseyin Yavuzdemir and police chief Resat Altay of the
Trabzon province in northern Turkey were removed from office due to
recent incidents in the region, the semi-official Anatolia news
agency reported on Friday.

Ministry of Interior Affairs charged two chief inspectors to
investigate whether there was any failure or negligence of the local
administration and the provincial security department, according to
the report.

Last year, Andrea Santaro, Italian Roman-Catholic priest of the Santa
Maria Church, was shot dead by a teenager in Trabzon where he was the
parish priest for a small Christian community.

The key suspects of the killing of journalist Hrant Dink were also
from the province.

Hrant Dink, a 53-year-old outspoken Turkish journalist of Armenian
descent, was shot dead in front of his office building in Istanbul
last Friday. The killing has ignited a national public outcry since
then.

Last Saturday, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced
that Ogun Samast, the suspected killer, was arrested in the northern
province of Samsun earlier in the day.

Before his killing, Dink had been convicted by the Article 301 of the
Penal Code of insulting Turkey’s identity over his comments on the
alleged Armenian genocide by Ottoman Turks during World War I and
received a six-month suspended sentence.

He had also received threat from nationalists who considered him as a
traitor, local media reported.

Turkey has denied that up to 1.5 million Armenians died as a result
of systematic genocide during the Turkish Ottoman period between 1915
and 1923.

Source: Xinhua

Unknown Man Shoots and Kills Head of Notary Office in Vanadzor

UNKNOWN MAN SHOOTS AND KILLS HEAD OF NOTARY OFFICE IN VANADZOR

Armenpress

VANADZOR, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS: Police in Armenia’s third-largest
town of Vanadzor are looking for a man who shot and killed today
morning the chief of a notary office.

Sona Veranian, 53, was killed in her office at 11 am before the eyes
of other office employees.. She died after receiving two shots in
her neck, police said.

Eye-witnesses said the man took out a shortened hunting rifle from
a bag and shot twice on the woman without saying a word. He escaped
the scene promptly.

Over 50,000 March in Istanbul in Funeral Procession for Hrant Dink

Democracy Now, NY
Jan 23 2007

Over 50,000 March in Istanbul in Funeral Procession for Slain
Turkish-Armenian Editor Hrant Dink

Listen to Segment |

Dink was assassinated on Friday outside his office shortly after
receiving death threats by Turkish nationalists for his writings
about the Armenian genocide of 1915. We speak to Zanku Armenian of
the Armenian National Committee of America. [includes rush
transcript]

Today is the funeral of prominent Turkish newspaper editor Hrant Dink
who was shot dead outside of his office last Friday. Dink had
recently received death threats by Turkish nationalists for his
writings about the Armenian genocide of 1915. Hrant Dink was a
Turkish citizen of Armenian descent who was at the forefront of
efforts challenging the official Turkish denial that the mass
killings of Armenians by Turks during World War I was genocide.
Seven suspects have been arrested in connection with Dink"s murder
including a 17 year old who has confessed to the crime. Police
officials have said a well- known nationalist militant has admitted
he provided a gun and money to the teenager. Over 50,000 people have
taken to the streets to follow Dink’s coffin. The only banner in the
procession will read, "We are all Hrant Dink, We are all Armenian."

Dink was also a staunch defender of free speech. This is him last
October speaking about a French law which makes it a crime to deny
the Armenian genocide.

Hrant Dink, speaking in October, 2006.
Zanku Armenian joins us now from Los Angeles. He is with the Armenian
National Committee of America.
Zanku Armenian, member of the Armenian National Committee of America

—————————————– —————————————
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
This transcript is available free of charge. However, donations help
us provide closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing on our
TV broadcast. Thank you for your generous contribution.
Donate – $25, $50, $100, more…

AMY GOODMAN: This is Hrant Dink last October speaking about a French
law which makes it a crime to deny the Armenian genocide. We’ll play
that in a moment, but first we’re going to go to Los Angeles to speak
with Zanku Armenian. He is with the Armenian National Committee of
America. Welcome to Democracy Now!

ZANKU ARMENIAN: Thank you for having me, Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the significance of Hrant Dink, who
he was, what he stood for, how he died?

ZANKU ARMENIAN: Well, Hrant Dink was not only a leader in the
Armenian context, but also in terms of Turkish society. He was one of
those brave and courageous people who decided to stick his neck out
and speak about the truth, the truth about the Armenian genocide, and
in his attempt to educate Turkish citizenry about the Armenian
genocide and start a dialogue, and for that, he paid with his life,
unfortunately. And the significance is that he was prepared to put
his life on the line. He had an opportunity to leave the country
several times, but he said he wanted to stick with the country where
he had decided to make a difference in society.

And the interesting thing here, Amy, is that, you know, there is a
very large segment in Turkish society that clearly seems ready and
willing to deal with its past, come to terms with it, analyze it,
discuss it. However, the Turkish government, in its more aggressive
and extremist point of view, with its continual denials, seems to be
creating this environment where intolerance and hatred and these
sorts of extremist acts are actually emboldened and encouraged.

AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to play this clip that we have of Hrant Dink.
And again, he is speaking last October about a French law which makes
it a crime to deny the Armenian genocide.

HRANT DINK: [translated] We should not be a pawn for the irrational
attitude between the two states. I am being sued in Turkey, because I
said that there was genocide, which is my own belief. But I will go
to France to protest against this madness and violate the new French
law, if I see it necessary, and I will commit the crime to be
prosecuted there.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Hrant Dink. Zanku Armenian, your response to
what he had to say last October?

ZANKU ARMENIAN: Well, you know, Hrant Dink was a man who had his very
independent thinking on these sorts of issues. You know, in France,
there’s also a law on the books where you cannot deny the Holocaust.
And the reason those laws are on the books and the reason the
Armenian law is being proposed is because, you know, you do have
extremist viewpoints that sometimes, you know, on these sorts of
matters that are of great tragic periods in our history, you know,
there are those elements that want to deny it.

However, Amy, he was also very passionate about freedom of speech,
and there’s no denying the fact that that was kind of the point he
was making for his own society, that he wanted to fight against
Article 301 of Turkish criminal code, which makes it illegal for
anyone to insult Turkishness, which, of course, can be very broadly
defined. And the current Turkish government, you know, and successive
Turkish governments had prosecuted Hrant Dink five times in the last
five years, so it’s kind of the height of hypocrisy, when the current
government comes out and expresses condolences and condemns the
murder, when it was they who were prosecuting the guy for expressing
freedom of thought, you know, expressing his free thoughts about the
Armenian genocide and trying to start a dialogue between the Turkish
people —

AMY GOODMAN: Zanku Armenian, for people who don’t understand, can you
explain very briefly the Armenian genocide, what it was, what the
Turkish government is denying?

ZANKU ARMENIAN: Yeah, the Armenian genocide occurred in 1915. 1.5
million Armenians who used to live in Turkey as Turkish citizens were
driven from their homes. The men were summarily executed throughout
the country. The population mostly lived in eastern Turkey with a
very important pocket of the population also in current-day Istanbul.
And the government at that time, under the guise of World War I,
decided that this would be a good time to eliminate what they called
the Armenian problem. And so, they drove the Armenian population
south through the desert, and along the way, you know, shot, killed,
raped men, women and children. And in terms of the communities they
lived in in eastern Turkey, they burned down villages, their houses,
churches. There are thousands of Armenian churches, centuries-old
churches that still exist in eastern Turkey, that are used for target
practice by the Turkish military today, because they want to get rid
of all evidence of the former Armenian population. So, in today’s
Turkey, there’s only about 30,000 or 40,000 Armenians left in a
community in Istanbul, and Hrant Dink was one of the leaders of that
community.

AMY GOODMAN: Have you heard about what happened today? Reuters is
reporting some 50,000 people marched in the funeral of Hrant Dink.

ZANKU ARMENIAN: Yes, I have heard of it. I heard the news. And, you
know, Amy, that is really the example of what I mentioned earlier,
where there is a very important part of the Turkish population that
is ready and willing to deal with the issue of the Armenian genocide,
their own history. But it is the Turkish government who has created
this environment of fear and intimidation, where people are afraid to
discuss openly their own history. Their own school —

AMY GOODMAN: And the US — since you’re talking to a world audience,
but also a US audience — the US government, what about its
relationship with Turkey?

ZANKU ARMENIAN: The US government is complicit in this issue, as
well, unfortunately, Amy. I’m very ashamed, as an American citizen,
to say that, because the State Department helps Turkey and emboldens
Turkey in their very aggressive Armenian genocide denial campaign.
They are part and parcel of that denial campaign. For example, they
did not raise the issue with Hrant Dink, you know, several times —
raise the issue of threats against him and his persecution and
prosecution under the law. The State Department never did anything
about it. On the Armenian genocide resolution, which has been
introduced in successive congresses and is about to be introduced
again in this congress, you know, the State Department is getting
ready to mount very aggressive opposition with the government of
Turkey against our own government here in the United States from
acknowledging the facts of the Armenian genocide.

AMY GOODMAN: Zanku Armenian, we’re going to have to leave it there. I
want to thank you for being with us, with the Armenian National
Committee of America.

To purchase an audio or video copy of this entire program, click here
for our new online ordering or call 1 (888) 999-3877.

sid=07/01/23/1530254

http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?

Fresno: Valley Armenians mourn slain Turkish newsman

Fresno Bee, CA
Jan 22 2007

Valley Armenians mourn slain Turkish newsman

Editor Hrant Dink spoke out about the Armenian genocide.
By Vanessa Colon / The Fresno Bee01/22/07 05:01:24

Fresno’s tight-knit Armenian community on Sunday mourned the death
of a newspaper editor in Turkey and prayed the killing would draw
world attention to the Armenian genocide.

Dozens who gathered for Sunday morning services inside the Holy
Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church in downtown Fresno remembered the
slain newsman. Others named him their new hero or "the latest martyr
of the Armenian genocide."

Hrant Dink, a Turk of Armenian descent who was gunned down Friday
outside his office in Istanbul, had received many threats because he
wrote about the Armenian genocide.

Between 1915 to 1923, 1.5 million Armenians died at the hands of the
Ottoman Turkish Empire. Turkey does not acknowledge that the genocide
happened but says many Armenians died in the civil unrest during the
fall of the empire.

"The truth will eventually come out. I think the good people of Turkey
will start speaking up," said Angie Ohannessian of Fresno.

Dink’s murder appalled many of the Valley’s Armenian-Americans,
who also are frustrated that the U.S. government doesn’t acknowledge
the genocide.

Dink was convicted of insulting Turkishness on Oct. 7, 2005, for his
public comments on the genocide.

Some Armenians said Dink’s killing is a reminder that hatred toward
Armenians in Turkey still exists.

The Rev. Vahan Gosdanian, speaking to the congregation at Holy Trinity
Armenian Apostolic Church, said Dink’s murder shows that the killings
of Armenians by Turks are not over. He called Dink "the latest martyr"
of the genocide.

Sarkis Sahatdjian said he hates what was done to Armenians but doesn’t
hate Turks because some Turks did help Armenians.

Sahatdjian, however, can’t understand how the United States, which
prides itself on ideals of freedom of speech and expression as well
as being a beacon of democracy, won’t acknowledge the genocide. Many
Armenians say they believe it’s because the United States is an ally
of Turkey.

"Most of the European Union knows what it [the Ottoman Turkish Empire]
did to the Armenians, so does the United States. So why is it [the
U.S.] playing coy," said 87-year-old Sahatdjian.

Sunday afternoon, Carla Garapedian, director of the genocide
documentary "Screamers," told dozens in the audience at California
State University, Fresno, that the United States tends to take a
neutral stance toward genocide.

Garapedian said the Clinton administration knew about the Rwandan
genocide, for example, but didn’t take action. Garapedian said Clinton
later apologized for the administration’s inaction.

Garapedian was a stand-in for Taner Akcam, a University of Minnesota
associate professor and one of very few Turkish historians to
acknowledge the genocide. Akcam was scheduled to speak at the Fresno
State event, but flew to Turkey instead to attend Dink’s funeral.

"Screamers," which features the history of the Armenian genocide and
other genocides, has prompted the Turkish government to redouble its
efforts to deny any role in the deaths, she said.

But some Armenian-Americans still hope that Turkey eventually will
acknowledge the genocide.

"Even the Turkish people are out there protesting," Ohannessian said.

Bloomberg: Turkey Urged to Tackle Nationalism After Dink Murder

Turkey Urged to Tackle Nationalism After Dink Murder (Update1)
By Ben Holland

Bloomberg
Jan 22 2007

Jan. 22 (Bloomberg) — Human-rights groups and European politicians
urged Turkey’s government and media to stop stoking chauvinist
feelings, as police blamed the Jan. 19 killing of Turkish-Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink on nationalists.

A teenager detained the next day confessed to killing Dink, saying
he was provoked by the journalist’s writings, according to the
newspaper Hurriyet. Istanbul police chief Celalettin Cerrah said
the crime was motivated by "nationalist feelings." Dink, along with
Nobel prizewinner Orhan Pamuk and other Turkish writers, questioned
Turkey’s denial of what Armenians say was genocide carried out by
Turks during World War I.

Turkey frequently prosecutes those like Dink and Pamuk who question
state policies on such issues, and they’re often labeled as traitors
by lawmakers and the media. Last week’s murder may show Turkish
politicians the danger of excessive flag-waving as they court the
patriotic vote in an election year, says Yusuf Alatas, head of Turkey’s
Human Rights Association.

"We’ve allowed a lynch culture to develop, an aggressive, threatening
nationalism," Alatas said in a phone interview from Ankara today. "The
government is worried about losing votes, so it joins in the chorus. I
just hope that after this, politicians will watch their tongues."

Pre-Election Rhetoric

Turkey is due to hold parliamentary elections by November. Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was criticized yesterday by a senior
member of his Justice and Development Party for using increasingly
nationalist rhetoric in the run-up to the polls, Milliyet newspaper
reported today.

Dink was given a suspended jail sentence in July for an article
about the Armenian massacres, and at the time of his death was being
prosecuted again for calling them genocide. Pamuk, the Turkish novelist
who won the 2006 Nobel literature prize, was charged with insulting
Turkish identity by referring to the mass killings, in a case later
abandoned by the court.

Dink "was killed because of his ideas, ideas that aren’t acceptable
to the state," Pamuk told reporters last night outside the office of
Dink’s Argos newspaper.

Armenians say that at least 1.5 million of their people were
slaughtered in a planned genocide from 1915. Turkey says that number
is inflated and that both Turks and Armenians were killed during
ethnic clashes.

EU Criticism

The European Union, which started membership talks with Turkey in
October 2005, has criticized the government for failing to defend
freedom of expression or repeal laws used to prosecute Dink, Pamuk
and other supporters of Armenian genocide claims.

France’s lower house of parliament last year passed a law making
denial of the Armenian genocide a criminal offense. Members of the
U.S. House of Representatives have said they may submit legislation
representing the killings as genocide as early as April.

Instead of changing laws to meet EU criteria, ministers have joined
in the criticism of dissidents. Justice Minister Cemil Cicek said
the organizers of an Istanbul conference in 2005 on the massacres of
Armenians were "stabbing the Turkish nation in the back."

Such attitudes are part of a nationalism that’s deeply rooted in
Turkey’s culture, said Cem Ozdemir, a German of Turkish origin who’s
a member of the European Parliament.

`No Coincidence’

"If you grow up with the saying that neighbors are enemies, and
the Turk’s only friend is a Turk, then this kind of hostility to
minorities is no coincidence," Ozdemir said in a telephone interview
before flying to Istanbul for Dink’s funeral tomorrow.

Turkey’s media have also helped create a climate in which "you’re
either with us or against us," Ozdemir said.

Hurriyet, the country’s most-read daily, reported Pamuk’s Nobel
victory last year with the headline "The Nobel Goes to a Turk." The
headline deliberately avoided mention of Pamuk’s name because his
comments had offended Turkish feelings, an editorial explained.

Alatas of the Human Rights Association cited the murder of a
Catholic priest and a high court judge last year and attempts to
lynch Kurdish rights activists, as further examples of a "rising tide
of nationalism."

"These kind of attacks are carried out by organized groups," Alatas
said. "And the more politicians use nationalist rhetoric, the easier
it is for such groups to recruit."