Attack on Turkish church signals further nationalist tensions

Ekklesia, UK
Jan 28 2007

Attack on Turkish church signals further nationalist tensions
-28/01/07

Hours after a nationalist protester with a handgun made an attempt to
hijack a commuter ferry in the Dardanelles strait on 27 January 2007,
unidentified attackers stoned at a church in the northern Turkish
town of Samsun today (Sunday), the Anatolian news agency has
reported.

There were no casualties, according to Mehmet Orhan Picakcilar, a
priest at the Agape Church. "This does damage to Turkey. This attack
depicts [our country] in a bad way before international public
opinion," he commented

Nationalists have been angered by pro-Armenian sentiment in Turkey
following responses to the murder of the Turkish-Armenian editor
Hrant Dink on 19 January, which prompted large pro-Armenian protests.

Dink was among those, including church groups, who have tried to
speak out about the 1915 Armenian genocide, which claimed one million
lives. It is illegal in Turkish law to raise this issue, and the
authorities deny that the event happened.

A rise in nationalism among young people from Turkey’s Black Sea
towns has come under the spotlight since the teenager suspected of
killing Dink and his alleged supporters were found to have come from
the town of Trabzon.

A Catholic priest was killed in his church in Trabzon in February
2006 by a Turkish teenager. The killing was believed to have been
part of protests in Islamic countries against cartoons in Danish
newspapers that mocked Prophet Mohammad.

Christians in secular but Muslim-majority Turkey – Armenians, Greeks,
Syriacs, Catholics, some Evangelical denominations and Jehovah’s
Witnesses – make up less than one percent of the country’s 72 million
people.

The country, now 99 per cent Muslim, has a significant Christian past
going back two millennia.

After Jesus was crucified in Jerusalem, his followers scattered
across the ancient world. What is now called Turkey was a key
crossroads between Europe, Asia, and the Middle East, and the
fledgling Christian faith took hold in what was then a Roman province
with a rich Greek heritage.

Turkey’s bid for accession to the European Union has caused
controversy in relation o its record on human rights and its
religious and cultural profile.

The Catholic Church and others have argued that Turkish membership of
the EU would compromise the continent’s largely Christian heritage.
Secularists fear a country with another large religious majority.

But those who favour Turkish inclusion point to the collapse of
Christendom in Europe, the significance of minority traditions, the
desirability of handling civil rights questions within a regional
framework of law, and the need to challenge both Islamist and
neoconservative attempts to buttress a `clash of civilizations’.

Pope Benedict, formerly strongly against Turkey’s accession, which
analysts say is still a long way off, seems to have moderated and
even changed his view following a recent visit to the country – and
the fallout from his own misjudged speech on Islam, Christianity and
reason in Germany.

yndication/article_070128turkey.shtml

http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/content/news_s

Putin – Kocharyan on oil refinery on border with Iran

SKRIN Market & Corporate News
January 26, 2007 Friday 10:26 AM GMT

Putin – Kocharyan on oil refinery on border with Iran

Russian President Vladimir Putin received his Armenian counterpart
Robert Kocharyan in Bocharov Ruchey residence in Sochi on Jan 24,
Kommersant reported.

The Armenian President spoke of Russia’s investment into his
country’s economy. He hinted at the project of building an oil
refinery on the border with Iran, suggesting that Gazpromneft should
carry it out. Iran will supply oil for the refinery,

However, Russian President has not made the final decision about the
oil refinery. Apparently, he is counting political risks, and they
seem to outweight economic profit. Yet, Putin might actually be
attracted by those risks.

RA Armed Forces General HQ Head States Army Powerful and Efficient

AZG Armenian Daily #015, 27/01/2007

HEAD OF RA ARMED FORCES GENERAL HEADQUARTERS STATES ARMENIAN ARMY
POWERFUL AND EFFICIENT

The Armenian Army is ready to fulfill the tasks set by the Supreme
Commander-in-Chief, the first deputy Defense Minister of Armenia, the
Head of the General Headquarters of RA AF, Colonel-General, Mikael
Harutiunyan told the journalists at today’s press conference today.

"The Armenian Army has been accomplished. I am sure the Army will
splendidly fulfill all its tasks. The Army protects and will protect
the Motherland", M Harutiunyan said. The Armenian Armed Forces have
high preparedness; they are provided with modern equipment and
armament and are completed with highly prepared personal staff. "Let
no one think of any aggressive actions with respect to Armenia," he
said.

By Marieta Makarian

Taming Turkish nationalism a challenge in accused killer’s hometown

EurasiaNet, NY
Jan 26 2007

TAMING TURKISH NATIONALISM A CHALLENGE IN ACCUSED KILLER’S HOMETOWN
Nicholas Birch 1/26/07

The murder last week of Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink continues
to make waves in Turkey, with the country’s powerful Turkish
Industrialists’ and Businessmen’s Association joining in national and
international calls for the immediate scrapping of a law that makes
it a crime "to belittle Turkishness." But the increasingly aggressive
nationalism that characterizes Trabzon, the port city that is home to
Dink’s suspected killer, suggests that the campaign to overturn the
law could face an uphill struggle.

Article 301, as the law is called, "laid the groundwork for the
assassination," said Mustafa Koç, a member of the Turkish
Industrialists’ and Businessmen’s Association (TUSIAD) and the
chairman of the board of Koç Holding, Turkey’s largest and most
influential business group. Those who support the law, he added,
speaking at the January 25 annual meeting of the TUSIAD high council,
"are trying to block transition . . . resist renewal . . . surrender
themselves to the current authoritarian atmosphere."

Taken to court by the same ultra-nationalists who targeted Nobel
Prize winner Orhan Pamuk, Dink, the editor-in-chief of Agos
newspaper, received a six-month suspended prison sentence under the
law in October 2005. In the last article he ever published, the
editor described the trial as a turning point in his life, writing
that the law had prompted "a significant segment of the population .
. . [to] view [me] as someone `insulting Turkishness.’"

Police have now detained five people in connection with Dink’s
January 19 murder, including 17-year-old suspected gunman Ogun
Samast, and an ultra-nationalist university student thought to be the
mastermind behind the attack. [For details, see the Eurasia Insight
archive].

All five detainees are from Trabzon, a fact that has convinced many
inhabitants that this port town, seen as the unofficial capital of
Turkey’s eastern Black Sea coastal region, is part of a sinister
plot.

For those locals less inclined to conspiracy theories, it is the
continuation of a nightmare that began in May 2005, when four young
left-wing students narrowly avoided being beaten to death in central
Trabzon by a lynch mob.

Like two smaller lynching attempts that followed it, that incident
hit Turkish headlines. Then, in February 2006, Trabzon gained
international notoriety after a 16-year old local boy shot and killed
the Italian priest who ran the local Catholic church.

"What has happened to Trabzon?" asked the headline in the Turkish
daily Radikal on January 22, a day after police, tipped off by
relatives, arrested gunman Ogun Samast on a bus that would have taken
him to Georgia.

Turkey was a nationalist country long before groups opposed to its
European Union accession process began pumping up xenophobia. Radical
nationalism of the sort that appears to have influenced Dink’s
murderers has traditionally been strongest in the towns south of the
3,500-meter peaks dividing Trabzon from the bleak Anatolian interior.
But it’s only recently that Trabzon has become a center for such
thinking, and locals say the phenomenon is spiraling out of control.

"What you have here is a headless monster, a nursery for potential
assassins," said Omer Faruk Altuntas, a lawyer and the local head of
the small, left-leaning Freedom and Democracy Party.

"You may not like its policies, but at least the MHP [Milliyetçi
Hareket Partisi – Nationalist Movement Party] controls its
followers," agreed town councilor Mehmet Akcelep, referring to
Turkey’s biggest extremist nationalist party. "But Samast and
hundreds of others like him aren’t party people. They’re free
operators. In part, Trabzon’s problems are Turkey’s problems. In the
space of little more than a decade, the port city’s population has
swollen from 150,000 to around 400,000 as farmers flee the economic
deprivation of the countryside. In Pelitli, the Trabzon suburb which
was home to Ogun Samast, youth unemployment is high, with only two
Internet cafes in which idle youngsters can wile the time away."

Local media also play a role. When General Hilmi Ozkok, then
commander-in-chief of Turkey’s armed forces, termed two Kurdish
teenagers arrested for trying to burn the Turkish flag "so-called
citizens," the town’s media outlets readily took up the accusation.
When leftist students began distributing leaflets about prison
conditions, two television stations told viewers they were
separatists. Within minutes, hundreds of shopkeepers were on the
street. The result was the May 2005 attempted lynching.

"Three or four times, [the local media has] pretty much invited
people to take out their guns and start shooting", said Gultekin
Yucesan, head of Trabzon’s Human Rights Association (IHD).

In most Anatolian towns, where people often only read local
newspapers for the used car advertisements, that wouldn’t matter. But
Trabzon’s ten papers and television stations are influential, for the
simple reason that this is a city built around soccer.

Trabzonspor is the only non-Istanbul club ever to have won the
Turkish League. Its blue and purple colors drape the city. And while
everybody here supports it, some say its influence on the city is
increasingly negative.

"Trabzon football has become a semi-official conduit for
nationalism," said retired teacher Nuri Topal.

Locals say it’s no surprise that Ogun Samast and Yasin Hayal, the man
believed to have given the teenager the gun that killed Dink, played
amateur soccer for Pelitlispor.

Rumors have long circulated about the club’s links with a local mafia
that got rich controlling this crucial staging post in Black Sea
human trafficking networks. Just last year, the club’s best player
was banned for conniving with match-fixing mafiosi.

IHD head Gultekin Yucesan describes an incident he saw at a
Trabzonspor match two days after Dink’s murder.

After a couple of bad decisions by the referee, he said, one
supporter shouted "Do that again and I’ll put a white hat on and blow
your head off." Samast was wearing a white hat when he shot Hrant
Dink.

"Trabzon must learn its lesson," proclaimed a headline in one local
paper on January 22. Though for now, it is far from clear that it
has.

Mehmet Samast, a distant relative of the teenager suspected of
killing Dink, tells a reporter how much he regrets what has happened,
how ashamed he feels. He appears to be sincere. But then, echoing the
rhetoric of several nationalist parties, he goes on to say that Ogun
Samast was the victim of an international plot.

"Trabzon is vital strategically," he explained. "This murder was the
work of the Americans, or the Armenian Diaspora. They didn’t like
[Dink] either, you know."

Writing on January 22 in the local newspaper Ilkhaber, columnist
Temel Korkmaz was blunter. Since Europeans insist on calling the
Kurdish separatists who kill Turkish soldiers "guerrillas," he wrote,
"I’ll call the man who killed Dink a guerrilla, too."

In her January 26 column, Ece Temelkuran, a liberal columnist who
writes for the national daily Milliyet, was pessimistic about
Turkey’s future. Readers were evenly divided in their reactions to
her earlier comments on Hrant Dink’s death, she wrote, with 50
percent supportive, 50 percent warning her to watch what she said.

But people who want to see a more open, more democratic Turkey "are
not 50 percent of this country," Temelkuran wrote. "We are in a tiny
minority. . . More than 200,000 people marched for Hrant Dink’s
funeral. That’s good. But don’t forget that number is barely 1
percent of Istanbul’s population."

Editor’s Note: Nicholas Birch specializes in Turkey, Iran and the
Middle East.

ANKARA: Turkish PM visits Dink’s family, Armenian patriarch to offer

Turkish PM visits Dink’s family, Armenian patriarch to offer condolences

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
Jan 24 2007

Istanbul, 24 January: Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
offered his condolences to family of Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos
editor-in-chief Hrant Dink, who was shot dead in front of his office
building in Istanbul last Friday.

Erdogan was accompanied by Agriculture and Rural Affairs Minister
Mehdi Eker, Istanbul Governor Muammer Guler and Mayor Kadir Topbas
during his visit to Dink’s house in Bakirkoy district.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also offered his condolences to
Mesrob II, the Patriarch of the Armenians in Turkey, over killing of
journalist Hrant Dink.

During his visit to Mesrob II, Erdogan expressed his profound sorrow
over killing of Dink.

Dink was shot dead in front of his office building in Istanbul
last Friday.

He was laid to rest yesterday in Balikli Armenian Cemetery following
a funeral at Virgin Mary Church in Kumkapi district.

Millennium Challenge Account-Armenia Receives First Transfer Of Seco

MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE ACCOUNT-ARMENIA RECEIVES FIRST TRANSFER OF
SECOND DISBURSEMENT

Yerevan, January 26. ArmInfo. Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC),
on behalf of the United States Government, has transferred the first
tranche of USD 1,460.000. from the second disbursement to Armenia.

The second transfer of USD 270.800 is scheduled for the next month.

The funds for Armenia’s Millennium Challenge Compact are approved
quarterly by the MCC and disbursed monthly into MCA-Armenia’s bank
account.

The money will be mainly directed towards the Agreements that
MCA-Armenia signed in January 2007. Specifically, the Implementing
Entity Agreement with National Statistical Service which will collect
data through surveys and provide MCA-Armenia with household survey
data, as well as data on rural poverty rates, income changes, and
satisfaction with the MCA program. The second Implementing Entity
Agreement was signed with the Armenian Road Directorate which will
be responsible for the implementation and the oversight of the Rural
Roads Rehabilitation Project. The money will also be used towards the
cost of the contract expected to be signed with the Water-to-Market
Activity Project Manager later this month.

The Canadian Government, Canada -Armenia Parliamentary Friendship Gr

AZG Armenian Daily #014, 26/01/2007

Murder of Hrant Dink

THE CANADIAN GOVERNMENT, THE CANADA-ARMENIA
PARLIAMENTARY FRIENDSHIP GROUP AND THE NATIONAL ETHNIC
PRESS AND MEDIA COUNCIL OF CANADA CONDEMN THE MURDER
OF JOURNALIST HRANT DINK

Ottawa- The Canadian Government and the Chair of
Canada-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship Group have
condemned the murder of the Armenian-Turkish
Journalist Hrant Dink in Turkey last week. The Hon.
Jason Kenney, Secretary of State, Multiculturalism and
Canadian Identity, in a statement issued today
extended his "heartfelt sympathy" to the Dink family
and to "believers in freedom and democracy." The
Secretary of State called Dink’s assassination a
"barbaric hate crime," and said he hoped justice would
be eventually served. Mr. Kenney described Dink as a
courageous and principled journalist particularly "in
his writings regarding the Armenian Genocide." On
behalf of the Canada-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship
Group (CAPFG), Gary Goodyear (MP-Cambridge) issued a
statement expressing his "shock and deep sadness for
the tragic murder of Turkish journalist Hrant Dink."
He described Dink’s murder as "an act which assaults
the basic principles of free expression and
democracy." According to the CAPFG president, Dink was
silenced because "his offence was to seek dialogue and
reconciliation between Turks and Armenians by
recognizing the Armenian Genocide of 1915." To mourn
the assassination of Dink, the National Ethnic Press
and Media Council of Canada (NEPMCC) also issued a
statement condemning the murder and expressed "the
horror of its members for the barbaric murder of
journalist Hrant Dink." The president of the
council, Thomas Saras called on the "United Nations to
investigate the circumstances of Dink’s murder," and
asked "the European Union and all the nations of the
world to disassociate themselves from the fascist
establishment in Ankara." Jean Meguerditchian,
President of the Armenian National Committee of Canada
(ANCC), expressed "The Canadian-Armenian community’s
appreciation to the Hon. Jason Kenney, Mr. Gary
Goodyear and Mr. Saras for their solidarity and
compassion during these difficult and somber times for
the Dink family, the Armenian people and Dink’s
righteous Turkish colleagues."

Istanbul standstill for Dink funeral

InTheNews.co.uk, UK
Jan 24 2007

Istanbul standstill for Dink funeral

Tuesday, 23 Jan 2007 21:26

At least 100,000 thronged the streets of Istanbul to mourn Hrant Dink

The funeral of a Turkish Armenian journalist attracted over 100,000
mourners in Istanbul today.

Hrant Dink, the 53-year-old editor of Agos magazine, was shot dead on
Friday.

Today’s funeral saw mourners, many of whom carried black signs
reading "we are all Hrant Dink" and "we are all Armenians", throng
the streets of Istanbul as the cortege processed through the city’s
streets.

"We are seeing off our brother with a silent walk, without slogans
and without asking how a baby became a murderer," Mr Dink’s widow
Rakel was quoted by the Reuters news agency as saying in a eulogy to
her dead husband.

Mr Dink was a vociferous critic of the Turkish government’s continued
refusal to accept culpability in the Armenian massacre of 1915, which
many foreign governments have recognised as genocide.

At least one million Armenians are thought to have died in the
killings, which, as today’s events demonstrate, remain a highly
controversial issue in Turkish society.

Nationalists infuriated by Mr Dink’s anger stance against the Turkish
government are believed to have carried out the murder. A 17-year-old
boy has confessed to the killing, according to media reports.

100,000 fill Istanbul to mourn murdered Armenian journalist

100,000 fill Istanbul to mourn murdered Armenian journalist
Devika Bhat and agencies

Times Online/UK
January 23, 2007

Tens of thousands of people today gathered on the streets of Istanbul
in a massive outpouring of grief for a slain Turkish-Armenian
journalist.

Hrant Dink was gunned down in broad daylight on Friday outside the
offices of his newspaper, Agos. Known for his articles on the mass
killings of Armenians during the final days of the Ottoman Empire, the
52-year-old angered nationalists who accused him of insulting Turkey.

In one of the largest funerals ever held in the Turkish capital,
up to 100,000 tearful mourners took to the streets from the early
hours of the morning, marching behind the sunflower-lined coffin of
the murdered editor along an 8km route from the his offices to an
Armenian Orthodox church. Mr Dink’s daughter, Sera, carried a framed
picture of her father and wept as she walked in front of the coffin.

Thousands upon thousands gradually filled the bridges and streets
as far as the eye could see in either direction, with the procession
forcing the closure of city centre.

As well as bidding farewell to Mr Dink, many were there to show
support for a more open and liberal Turkey free from the grasp of
the hardline nationalists who still enjoy significant influence in
the country. Until today, there have been few such rallies in Turkey
in favour of freedom of speech.

Much of the general consensus was demonstrated via numerous placards,
displaying such slogans as: ‘We are all Hrant Dinks’ and ‘We are all
Armenians’ – in both Turkish and Armenian.

But despite a request from Mr Dink’s family not to turn the funeral
into a protest, some mourners were more vocal in raising their opinion,
holding up their fists and shouting: "Shoulder to shoulder against
fascism" and "Murderer 301" – a reference to the Turkish law that was
used to prosecute the journalist and others on charges of insulting
"Turkishness."

Among the intellectuals dragged to court over Article 301 was novelist
Orhan Pamuk, who last year won the Nobel Prize in literature. Such
prosecutions have caused anxiety at the EU, which is considering
Turkey’s bid to join its ranks, amid reservations about its record
on human rights and freedom of expression.

Mr Dink sought to encourage reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia,
but chose a dangerous path by making public statements about the
murder of Armenians by Turks in the early 20th century, which remains
one of the nation’s most divisive issues.

On several occasions, Dink expressed his view that the killings
amounted to genocide, enraging nationalists who have adamantly claimed
there was bloodshed
on both sides during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. The remarks
also landed him in court and prompted death threats.

Police are questioning seven suspects, including 17-year-old Ogun
Samast – who authorities say has confessed to shooting the journalist
– and Yasin Hayal, a nationalist militant convicted in a 2004 bomb
attack at a McDonald’s restaurant.

Hayal has confessed to inciting the slaying and providing a gun and
money to the teenager, according to police.

"It was an attack against all of us," said Oya Basaran, 52, a school
principal. "We want to live together as brothers. We want to give
the message to the world that the killing does not represent us."

Turk General’s Involvement Can Not Sharply Improve Azerbaijani Army’

TURK GENERAL’S INVOLVEMENT CAN NOT SHARPLY IMRPOVE AZERBAIJANI ARMY’S
STATE, RA DEFENCE MINISTER BELIEVES

YEREVAN, JANUARY 22, NOYAN TAPAN. Commenting upon the information on
the possible appointment of the Turkish Army General on the post of
the Deputy Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan, RA Defence Minister Serge
Sargsian expressed an opinion at the January 19 press conference
that "it is not desirable that one of Armed Forces heads of a state
becomes another country’s representative." The Minister mentioned
that starting from 1992-1993, Turkish instructors have always been
in the Azerbaijani Armed Forces." In S.Sargsian’s words, the Turkish
Armed Forces are very efficient, and the highest officer corps –
well prepared. "I think that the Turkish General can do much for the
Azerbaijani army’s good. But if anybody supposes that 1-2 officials
can make sharp changes in the situation, I do not believe it. It must
be a result of a continual work," the Minister stated.