Young Muslims In Turkey Murder Three Christians

YOUNG MUSLIMS IN TURKEY MURDER THREE CHRISTIANS
Barbara G. Baker, Compass Direct

Chritianity Today, IL
April 20 2007

Deaths mark first known martyrdom of Turkish converts since founding
of republic.

In a gruesome assault against Turkey’s tiny Christian community,
five young Muslim Turks entered a Christian publishing office in the
southeastern province of Malatya Wednesday and slit the throats of
the three Protestant Christians present.

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Two of the victims, Necati Aydin, 36, and Ugur Yuksel, 32, were
Turkish converts from Islam. The third man, Tilmann Geske, 46, was
a German citizen.

The Turkish press reported Thursday that four of the five young men
arrested for the murders, all 19 to 20 years of age, admitted during
initial interrogations that they were motivated by both "nationalist
and religious feelings."

"We did this for our country," an identical note in the pockets of
all five young men read, Channel D television station reported. "They
are attacking our religion."

According to the newspaper Hurriyet, one of the suspects declared
during police questioning, "We didn’t do this for ourselves. We did
it for our religion. May this be a lesson to the enemies of religion."

In a demonstration against the Zirve Publishing office in Malatya two
years ago, local protestors had claimed its publishing and distribution
activities constituted "proselytism" among Muslims and should be
closed down. Turkish law, however, guarantees the right to engage in
religious evangelism if it does not contain proven political motives.

The three Christians were found tied hand and foot to chairs at 1:30
p.m. Wednesday in the liaison office of Zirve Publishing in Malatya’s
Niyazi Misr-i district. Their throats had been cut and their bodies
marred by multiple stab wounds.

Both Aydin and Geske were already dead when local police discovered
their bodies. Police had received a call from a nearby office in the
building about a "disturbance" happening in the Christian publishing
house’s third-floor office.

Although Yuksel was still breathing and rushed to a nearby hospital
for massive blood transfusions, he expired soon afterwards.

When police stormed the building, one of the killers threw himself
from the third story to the street, suffering a broken leg and severe
head injuries. The other four suspects were apprehended as they tried
to flee the building, still holding their bloodied knives.

During interrogation, the four confessed killers claimed the attack
had been planned by the fifth suspect, now hospitalized in serious
condition. But Thursday Malatya Gov. Halil Ibrahim Dasoz announced that
five additional suspects had been arrested in the police investigation.

Turkish government leaders were quick to denounce the murders and
promise a full investigation. The police, meanwhile, fielded conjecture
that the suspects were linked to the Turkish Hizbollah, a Kurdish
Islamic movement calling for a Muslim state in southeastern Turkey.

According to Zirve Publishing’s general manager, Hamza Ozant, the
company’s Malatya staff had received death threats in recent months.

All three of the men worked in the office and attended the local
30-member Kurtulus Protestant Church pastored by Aydin.

Aydin is survived by his wife, Semse, and a son and daughter,
both preschool age. Geske with his wife Susanne had two sons and a
daughter, ages 8 to 13 years. Yuksel was engaged to be married within
a few months.

Forensic authorities surrendered Yuksel’s body last night to his
family, who buried him Thursday morning in his home village in
Elazig. Aydin’s funeral has been set for Saturday afternoon (April 21),
at the Anglican Church in Izmir, his home city in western Turkey. It
is not yet known whether Geske’s widow will decide to inter his body
in Malatya or Germany.

In a bold initiative Thursday, Pastor Ihsan Ozbek, chairman of the
Alliance of Protestant Churches in Turkey, led a press conference
broadcast live from Malatya by CNN-TURK and shown simultaneously on
several other TV channels.

Flanked by the churches’ legal representative, Orhan Kemal Cengiz,
and Istanbul pastor Bedri Peker, Ihsan distributed a forthright press
release to the Turkish media headlined, "A Horrible Brutality, But
Not a Surprise."

"Yesterday, Turkey was buried in the darkness of the Middle Ages,"
Ozbek declared.

He compared the nation’s ongoing conspiracy theories and missionary
phobias to the witch-hunts of the Middle Ages.

"We know this will not be the last [martyr]. But with all our hearts
we wish it would be the last," Ozbek said.

First Convert Martyrs

Wednesday’s deadly attack was the first known martyrdom of Turkish
converts from Islam since the founding of the Turkish Republic in 1923.

But it was the third tragic incident targeting Christians in Turkey
in the past 15 months to spark major international media coverage.

Last year an Italian Catholic priest was shot to death while kneeling
in his church in the Black Sea port city of Trabzon.

This past January, a prominent Turkish journalist of Armenian Christian
descent, Hrant Dink, was murdered in Istanbul.

Over the past three years, top government officials have been
accused of fanning growing hostility against non-Muslims by openly
criticizing Christian missionary activities. Local prosecutors and
police authorities are often reluctant to pursue reported incidents
of vandalism or threats against church buildings or personnel.

The last deadly attack targeting Turkish converts to Christianity
took place in Gaziantep in 1997, when an extremist Islamist group
bombed a Christian bookstand at a local fair, killing a small child
and injuring many bystanders. The culprits were arrested and sentenced
to heavy prison terms.

Gov. Schwarzenegger Proclaims Days Of Remembrance Of The Armenian Ge

GOV. SCHWARZENEGGER PROCLAIMS DAYS OF REMEMBRANCE OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

KarabakhOpen
19-04-2007 13:10:03

Proclamation

Between the years 1915 and 1923, during the chaos of World War I,
over one million Armenian men, women and children living within the
Ottoman Empire’s borders were killed; forcing hundreds of thousands
of Armenians to flee to foreign countries after being stripped of
their possessions, their nationalidentities and their homeland.

Scores fled to the United States, and California was fortunate to
become home to one of the largest populations of Armenians outside the
Republic of Armenia. Many of California’s Armenian-American families
are the descendents of these ,courageous genocide survivors, whose hope
for a life independent war and violence was realized on our soil. Like
their family members before them, the Armenian-American community
bravely flourished and contributed much to our state and nation.

Documented as the first instance of genocide in the twentieth century,
the Armenian Genocide remains unacknowledged to this day. I strongly
echo the sentiments that all nations must examine their own painful
histories, as the denial of genocide further wounds a nation’s
ability to heal. Though over ninety years have passed since these
mass killings took place, present day atrocities resonate throughout
the world. It is our responsibility to recognize the brutalslayings
of so many innocents, remembering their suffering and vowing to help
prevent future genocides.

I join California’s Armenian-American communities and all Armenians
worldwide in remembering those who were killed and persecuted during
the Armenian Genocide, and urge people throughout the world to never
forget these horrific crimes against humanity.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER, Governor of the State of
California, do hereby proclaim the week of April 22nd – April 29th,
2007, as "Days of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide."

IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have here unto set my hand and caused the Great
Seal of the State of California to be affixed this 6th day of April
2007.

Arnold Schwarzenegger GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA

BAKU: Platvoet To Visit Azerbaijan, Armenia And The Conflict Zone Al

LEO PLATVOET TO VISIT AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA AND THE CONFLICT ZONE ALONG WITH LORD RUSSELL-JOHNSTON

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
April 19 2007

"The report drawn up by PACE co-rapporteurs Andres Herkel and Tony
Lloyd on honoring of obligations and commitments by Azerbaijan is a
very good document.

"There is a need for carrying out speedy reforms, making amendments
to the Electoral Code before the forthcoming parliamentary elections
in the country. There should be strong opposition along with the
strong authority, and pressures against media should be ended," Leo
Platvoet, PACE rapporteur on missing persons in the South Caucasus
told the APA’s correspondent.

The rapporteur said that he has suspended preparation of the report
on missing persons.

"It is connected with the upcoming parliamentary elections in
Armenia. The meeting of the committee to be held on May 25 in Belgrade
will determine whether the report will be debated in PACE summer
session. If the report is adopted, it will be put to debate in the
June session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe,"
he said.

Leo Platvoet also said he will visit the region in June in the
composition of the PACE Nagorno Karabakh subcommittee.

"I will possibly visit Azerbaijan, Armenia and the conflict zone along
with Lord Russell-Johnston. I can not publicize the composition of
the mission that will visit the region," he said.

Moscow: 2 Brutally Stabbed To Death In Apparent Hate Crimes

2 BRUTALLY STABBED TO DEATH IN APPARENT HATE CRIMES
by Carl Schreck, Staff Writer

The Moscow Times
April 19, 2007 Thursday

A Tajik citizen and an ethnic Armenian were brutally stabbed to
death in separate attacks that appear racially motivated, authorities
said Wednesday.

Five suspects have been detained in connection with the stabbings,
one of which was recorded by a video surveillance camera.

Khairullo Sadykov, 26, a street sweeper from Tajikistan, was stabbed
35 times on Monday evening outside an apartment building on Ulitsa
Metallurgov, near the Perovo metro station in eastern Moscow, said
Sergei Vasilovsky, chief investigator at the Eastern Administrative
District prosecutor’s office.

He died on the spot.

Vasilovsky did not have information about arrests in connection with
the death. But a law enforcement source told Komsomolskaya Pravda that
two teenagers resembling skinheads had been detained thanks to video
footage from a surveillance camera installed near a building entryway.

The footage showed two young men of Slavic appearance with shaven heads
stabbing Sadykov, and both were wearing "high, laced-up, army-style
boots," the source said, Komsomolskaya Pravda reported Wednesday.

The report identified the suspects as Pavel Skachayevsky, a 17-year-old
student at the Russian State Physical Education University, and
Artur Ryno, a 17-year-old art student. The clothes they were wearing
when detained were covered in blood, and they closely resembled the
attackers on the surveillance video, the report said.

Prosecutors have opened a murder investigation. If charged and
convicted, the two suspects face up to life in prison.

In the other attack, Armenian businessman Karen Abramyan, 46, was
stabbed 20 times by three assailants at around 10 p.m. Monday in
southwest Moscow, police said.

Abramyan was taken to a hospital, where he died of his wounds.

A law enforcement source told Interfax that three young men had been
detained. The source said the trio had shaved heads and were wearing
army-style boots.

"After he was taken to the hospital, the victim said he was attacked
because of his ethnicity, saying the young men were shouting racial
epithets," the source was quoted as saying.

The source said the detainees had admitted to stabbing the businessman.

A police spokesman declined to comment on the detentions.

Montebello Mayor’s Office Marks 40th Anniversary Of Memorial To Vict

MONTEBELLO MAYOR’S OFFICE MARKS 40th ANNIVERSARY OF MEMORIAL TO VICTIMS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BUILT BY ITS DECISION

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 18 2007

MONTEBELLO, APRIL 18, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The other day
Montebello Mayor’s Council adopted a declaration, according to which
the 40th anniversary of decision of Mayor’s Office on building a
memorial to the victims of Armenian Genocide will be marked. According
to that decision, dozens of years ago the memorial was built and
placed at the Bignell public park.

During the solemn ceremony, at which more than a hundred members
of Armenian community of Montebello, representatives of ARFD party,
clergymen and pupils of Mesropian national college were present, Mayor
Norma Lopez-Reid read the declaration and handed it to representative
of memorial’s council, Michael Minasian.

Vigen Bagratuni, Chairman of Armenian National Committee, expressing
gratitude to the Mayor and members of Council invited the latters
to the political rally to be held on April 23 near the memorial to
the victims.

Highly estimating the brave conduct of Montebello Mayor’s Council
in his speech, Bagratuni, in particular, said: "Fourty years ago
Montebello Mayor’s Council resisted the pressures of Ambassador
of Turkey to U.S. and built the memorial to victims of Armenian
Genocide. Two years ago it opposed to the pressures of Ambassador
of Azerbaijan to U.S. and approved the status of sister cities with
the capital of the independent republic of Artsakh, Stepanakert. We
are grateful to the Mayor’s Council, moreover, we are proud of their
brave conduct."

Armenian Attacked By Skinheads Died

ARMENIAN ATTACKED BY SKINHEADS DIED

PanARMENIAN.Net
17.04.2007 17:38 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 46-year-old Armenian immigrant Karen Abramian who
was earlier attacked by skinheads in the Russian capita, died in the
hospital. According to law enforcement bodies, on Monday evening three
young men, dressed like skinheads, attacked Abramian. Two suspects
have been arrested in connection with this murder, RFE RL reports

In the Southwestern administrative district of Moscow on Kedrov Street
near the house 22 a group of nationalists attacked K. Abramian. The
city on duty officer received information about the attack at
22.00 local time April 16. Policemen who arrived on the crime scene
discovered a man with knife wounds.

According to the victim, three smooth-headed young men with high
shoes attacked him.

Karen Abramian was sure the cause for attack was his nationality. He
said, while stabbing him the unknown young men shouted nationalistic
slogans.

Armenia, Iran, Russia To Open Talks On Oil Refinery

ARMENIA, IRAN, RUSSIA TO OPEN TALKS ON OIL REFINERY
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
April 17 2007

Government officials from Armenia, Iran and Russia will meet soon
to discuss an ambitious idea to build a big oil refinery on the
Armenian-Iranian border that would cater for the Iranian market.

President Robert Kocharian reportedly discussed the multimillion-dollar
project with senior Russian officials during a visit to Moscow in
January. A subsidiary of Russia’s state-run Gazprom gas monopoly
said afterwards that it is considering investing an estimated $1.7
billion needed for the construction of the would-be refinery near
the Armenian border town of Meghri.

Reports in the Russian press have said the facility would have an
annual capacity to refine up to 7 million tons of Iranian oil that
would be pumped into Armenia through a special pipeline to be built in
northwestern Iran. Petrol produced by it would then be shipped back
to Iran by rail. Construction of the 200-kilometer pipeline and the
railway would require hundreds of millions of dollars in additional
funding. Armenia and Iran have no rail links at present.

The Russian Regnum news agency quoted Armenia’s Deputy Energy Minister
Areg Galstian as saying that officials from the three governments
will try to "ascertain the scale of each party’s participation in
the project." Galstian did not give further details of the talks.

Despite its vast oil reserves, Iran lacks refining capacities and
has to import gasoline to meet domestic demand. Nonetheless, some
Russian experts have questioned the economic wisdom of the project,
arguing that oil refineries are usually located near sea ports or
major oil pipelines. They see political motives behind the idea of
building such a facility in landlocked Armenia.

Commemoration of 92nd ann. of Armenian Genocide to be held in Wisc.

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
April 14 2006

COMMEMORATION OF THE 92nd ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE TO BE
HELD AT THE WISCONSIN STATE CAPITOL APRIL 24

On Tuesday, April 24, 2007, the Armenian National Committee of
Wisconsin, State Representatives Mark Honadel, Jeff Stone and Robin
Vos and State Senators Mary Lazich, John Lehman and Jeff Plale are
hosting a reception and program to commemorate the 92nd Anniversary
of the Armenian Genocide. This event will be held from 9:45 to 10:45
AM in the Assembly Parlor at the Wisconsin State Capitol, 2 E. Main
St, Madison, WI 53702. The program will feature remarks from
Representative Robin Vos, Senator John Lehman and Zohrab Khaligian,
representing the Armenian National Committee of Wisconsin.
The event hosted annually by the ANC of WI gives the Armenian
American community an opportunity to thank the members of the
Wisconsin State Assembly and State Senate for adopting Armenian
Genocide Resolution, which designates April 24 of each year as
"Wisconsin Day of Remembrance for the Armenian Genocide of 1915 to
1923" and to continue to educate and promote awareness of Armenia and
Armenian issues, particularly the Armenian Genocide.
The State Assembly had adopted Assembly Resolution 42 (AR 42) on May
2, 2000, while the State Senate adopted Senate Resolution 14 on March
7, 2002, thereby reaffirming the Armenian Genocide as a fact of
history. The Armenian National Committee of Wisconsin has organized a
commemorative event at the Wisconsin State Capitol every April (with
the exception of 2006), since the Assembly adopted AR 42.
In addition to the State Capitol event, a joint memorial service will
be held at 7:00 PM on Tuesday, April 24, at St. Mesrob Armenian
Church in Racine, 4605 Erie St, Racine, WI 53402. The memorial
service will include the participation of all four Armenian churches
in Wisconsin: St. Hagop and St. Mesrob in Racine, St. John the
Baptist in Greenfield and Holy Resurrection in South Milwaukee.
To note, the Armenian National Committee of Wisconsin is a part of
the largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots
political organization. Working in coordination with a network of
offices, chapters and supporters throughout the United States and
affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCA actively advances
the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.

First Route By ‘Poti-Caucasus’

FIRST ROUTE BY ‘POTI-CAUCASUS’

Panorama.am
17:22 12/04/2007

Within the coming 10-15 days the ferry "Poti-Caucasus" will fulfill
its first commercial run. Arsen Ghazaryan, Chairman of the Union of
manufacturers and entrepreneurs, Director of "Apaven" OJSC, stated
during today press conference. The first experimental voyage was
implemented yesterday evening.

Arsen Ghazaryan reminds that the ferry "Smat" arrived in the port
Poti on April 10, which, in its turn, started from the Russian port
"Caucasus" to Georgia.

Thus, a transport road has been launched between Armenia and Russia,
which requires less time and expenses. "We have being waiting for the
launch of this ferry for 10 years", Ghazaryan mentioned. In his words,
the port "Caucasus" is not so deep, and it has been difficult to find
a ferry for that.

The Swiss "Reserve Capital Engineering Corporation" has projected
and built a ferry with one small bridge, the length of which is 150
meters, and the width – 22 meters. Loading duration is 1 hour. The
tonnage of the ferry is 50 carriages (60 kg each). It should be noted
before that Armenia transported cargo from Russia via the Ukrainian
port "Ilichevsk". But in that case the cargo have reached to the
destination point within 50 hours.

Support Grows For Armenian Genocide Resolution Among Congressmen

SUPPORT GROWS FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION AMONG CONGRESSMEN

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.04.2007 12:50 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In letters circulated today to Members of the
House of Representatives, the Armenian National Committee of America
(ANCA) highlighted the growing support for the Armenian Genocide
Resolution among members serving on Congressional committees dealing
with America’s defense capabilities, intelligence community, foreign
policy, and homeland security.

"We are deeply gratified by the strong, bipartisan support for the
Armenian Genocide Resolution among Members of Congress responsible
for our nation’s defense and foreign policies," said Aram Hamparian,
Executive Director of the ANCA. "Beyond the clear moral issues at
stake in America’s principled stand against all genocides, these
Members realize that Turkey, by coming to terms with this crime,
will lower regional tensions, open the door to improved relations
with Armenia, and ultimately contribute to its own acceptance by the
European family of nations."