Turkey: Activists Mark Journalist’s Death 5 Yrs On

TURKEY: ACTIVISTS MARK JOURNALIST’S DEATH 5 YRS ON

(AP)
19 Jan 2012

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) ~W Protesters are gathering to mark the fifth
anniversary of a Turkish-Armenian journalist’s murder as outrage
grows over a trial which failed to shed light on alleged official
negligence or even collusion.

Human rights activists on Thursday placed red carnations on the spot
where Hrant Dink was shot dead in Istanbul, outside of his minority
Agos newspaper.

Thousands are expected to march for justice, a call shared by Turkish
leaders and leading businessmen who expressed unease over this week’s
sentencing of one man to life in prison for masterminding the killing,
while another 18 were acquitted of charges of acting under a terrorist
organization’s orders.

The gunman was sentenced to nearly 23 years in prison in July.

Turkish Top Officials Trying To Appease Uproar Over Dink Case

TURKISH TOP OFFICIALS TRYING TO APPEASE UPROAR OVER DINK CASE

PanARMENIAN.Net
January 19, 2012 – 11:29 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Turkey’s President and government officials sought
to appease uproar over the verdict in the case into Armenian-Turkish
journalist Hrant Dink’s murder, calling for patience until the judicial
process was completed, Hurriyet Daily News reported.

“I see the public’s indignation. We have to wait for the completion of
the judicial process. The ruling will be appealed,” President Abdullah
Gul said. He added that the State Inspection Board, which he had tasked
with looking into the Dink probe, would soon complete its report.

Justice Minister Sadullah Ergin also urged patience, while Deputy
Prime Minister Bulent Arınc rejected criticism of the government, even
though he acknowledged the ruling had failed to satisfy public opinion.

“The government’s only task was to find the perpetrators. We handed
them over to justice within 30 hours. We did our part,” Arınc
said on the private TV8 channel, referring to the prompt capture of
self-confessed gunman Ogun Samast and his alleged accomplices.

In contrast to his colleagues, Culture Minister Ertugrul Gunay slammed
the judges who concluded Dink’s murder was an individual act rather
than the deed of an organized group that received protection from
state officials.

“If this is not an organized crime, then what other incident
is organized?” Gunay said in Antalya. The ruling had showed “how
efficient and resistant are the mechanisms that want to cover up this
murder,” he added. He voiced hope that the Supreme Court of Appeals
would rectify the case because the current verdict “is impossible to
accept and understand.”

Opposition parties also lashed out at the ruling. Emine Ulker Tarhan
of the Republican People’s Party (CHP) maintained the “deep state”
was behind Dink’s murder and the judiciary “kept mum over all that
has happened and now even approved it.”

European Commission responsible for enlargement, Stefan Fule’s
spokesman Peter Stano issued a statement saying the authorities had
failed to protect Dink even though they knew ultranationalists were
plotting to kill him.

Ria Oomen-Ruijten, European Parliament member and Turkey rapporteur,
said, “The verdict is disappointing. The Hrant Dink case could have
been an example of how properly functioning judicial institutions
deal with disruptive forces in society. This verdict makes clear the
need for further judicial reform in Turkey.”

A Turkish court has convicted Yasin Hayal, a major suspect in the
killing of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, of instigating a
murder and sentenced him to life in prison, while Erhan Tuncel was
acquitted of murder charges by the court.

The Istanbul 14th High Criminal Court issued its ruling in the 25th
hearing of the case. Tuncel was given 10 years, six months for his role
in a McDonalds bombing in 2004. The court, however, acquitted Hayal and
several others of charges of acting under a terrorist organization’s
orders, angering lawyers who say the trial failed to shed light on
alleged connections between the suspects and some state officials.

The Dink family’s lawyer, Fethiye Cetin, slammed the ruling,
saying it meant that a “state tradition of political murders” was
deliberately left intact because it did not deal with accusations of
state involvement in the 2007 murder.

Today, January 19, marks the 5th anniversary of the murder.

BAKU: Commission On Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant To Be Established I

COMMISSION ON METSAMOR NUCLEAR POWER PLANT TO BE ESTABLISHED IN TURKISH PARLIAMENT

Trend
Jan 19 2012
Azerbaijan

A special commission will be created in the Turkish parliament to
investigate the activity of the Metsamor nuclear power plant (NPP),
member of the Turkish Grand National Assembly Sinan Ogan told Trend
on Thursday.

He said that the Metsamor NPP poses a threat for the whole region.

The energy ministry and the Turkish government take serious measures
to close this NPP,” Mr Ogan said.

The Metsamor NPP was built in 1970. After the devastating Spitak
earthquake, the plant’s activity had been suspended, but in 1995
despite international protests, the work of the station was reactivated
and in addition, a second reactor was launched.

Given the large number of minor earthquakes in the past 10 years in
this area, as well as the intensification of seismic readings indicated
by seismologist research, in the case of a big accident taking place
at Metsamor, not only Armenia, but also all countries in the Southern
Caucasus and the Middle East would be seriously affected.

Henshag Slams Turkey’s Interferences In Arab Spring

HENSHAG SLAMS TURKEY’S INTERFERENCES IN ARAB SPRING

Now Lebanon

Jan 18 2012

The Henshag Party slammed on Wednesday Turkey’s “flagrant
interferences” in the Arab Spring, and said Turkey is exploiting the
Arab Spring to serve its own regional interests.

“A government that shuts up its intellectuals and jails them cannot
be one that defend the rights of others,” the Armenian Party said in
a statement.

The party added that Turkey, which for years, denied the Armenians’
rights, as well as other people’s rights, cannot be an example to
look up to.

Commenting on Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs Ahmet Davutoglu’s
last week visit to Lebanon, the Henshag said its visit “falls within
the context of Turkey’s suspicious [aims].”

http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=354154

French Genocide Bill Dealt Setback

FRENCH GENOCIDE BILL DEALT SETBACK

UPI United Press International
Jan 18 2012

Comments (1)EmailPrintListen PARIS, Jan. 18 (UPI) — The Laws
Commission of the French Senate rejected a bill Wednesday that would
make denying the 1915 Armenian genocide in Turkey a crime.

The full Senate will take up the measure Monday, and it is expected
to pass, Radio France Internationale reported. The National Assembly
approved it in December.

If the bill becomes law, anyone convicted of denying that hundreds
of thousands of Armenians were deliberately killed in Turkey could
face a year in prison and a fine of 45,000 euros (almost $60,000). A
similar law criminalizes Holocaust denial, and a 2001 law officially
declares the massacres of 1915 to be genocide.

Armenians say 1.5 million people were killed in a deliberate attempt
to wipe them out in Turkey. The Turkish government, which can prosecute
people who describe what happened as a genocide, says the actual number
was about 500,000 and the killings were a consequence of World War I.

Turkey has threatened France with economic and diplomatic reprisals
if the bill becomes law.

Sochi Armenians Want To Criminalize Denial Of Genocide In Russia

SOCHI ARMENIANS WANT TO CRIMINALIZE DENIAL OF GENOCIDE IN RUSSIA

NEWS.am
January 19, 2012 | 17:32

SOCHI. – Signature collection action calling Russian State Duma
and Russian citizens to pass a bill criminalizing crimes of Nazism
and Armenian Genocide in Turkey in 1915-22 is supported not only by
Armenian NGOs but also by Circassians, Kazaks and the community of
Greeks in Sochi, Armenian Yerkramas newspaper based in Russia reports.

To note, the action is held by the initiative of the Armenians of
Sochi, who called on members of Russian State Duma to follow their
French colleagues and adopt a bill criminalizing the Armenian Genocide
denial.

Newly established Union of Armenians of Sochi also decided to launch
a campaign among the citizens urging to sign two petitions to State
Duma and City Council of Sochi.

In their address to the City Council, the Union called to condemn
the Armenian Genocide and declare April 24 a Remembrance Day

As for Tuesday, the initiative was supported by 26 NGOs, 5 printing
houses and 13 information resources on the Internet.

Head Of Armenian Public Council Not Wishing To Be MP

HEAD OF ARMENIAN PUBLIC COUNCIL NOT WISHING TO BE MP

NEWS.am
January 20, 2012 | 01:44

YEREVAN. – Head of Armenian Public Council and off parliamentary
National Democratic Union Party (NDU) Vazgen Manukyan does not want
to be an MP. Moreover, learnt of his candidacy from media, he himself
rejected it in the interview to Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Some media outlets claimed he would run in the elective district,
currently represented by Armenian President’s brother, MP Sashik
Sargsyan.

“I leant on my candidacy from media. I have no intentions to be an MP.

Why they decided that I want to be one? Even if the NDU participates
and we gain seats in the Parliament, I will quit,” Manukyan said.

NDU has not decided on participation in the parliament elections yet.

Human Rights Watch Says Turkish Court Protects Dink’s Killers

HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH SAYS TURKISH COURT PROTECTS DINK’S KILLERS

asbarez
Thursday, January 19th, 2012

Human Rights Watch

ISTANBUL–A Turkish court’s verdict on January 17, that there was
no state involvement or organized plot behind the 2007 shooting of
the Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink is a travesty of justice,
Human Rights Watch said Wednesday.

“The Istanbul court’s denial of the plot behind Hrant Dink’s murder
flies in the face of evidence,” said Emma Sinclair-Webb, Turkey
researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Five years after the killing,
Turkey’s criminal justice system remains unwilling to probe state
collusion in political assassinations.”

Istanbul Heavy Penal Court No. 14 acquitted all 19 defendants accused
of being part of a criminal organization responsible for Dink’s murder
on January 19, 2007. The court concluded that the crime was not the
work of a criminal organization motivated by ideological aims and
that there was no deeper plot behind the murder.

The court sentenced Yasin Hayal to aggravated life imprisonment, up
to 40 years in prison, for planning and organizing Dink’s murder by
17-year-old Ogun Samast. The court also sentenced Ahmet İskender and
Ersin Yolcu, as accessories to the murder, to 12 years and 6 months
imprisonment and Salih Hacısalioglu to 10 months for possession of
unlicensed ammunition.

Erhan Tuncel, who faced the same charges as Hayal, was acquitted
of any involvement and sentenced to 10 years and 6 months for an
entirely separate crime in September 2004: the bombing of a branch
of McDonald’s in Trabzon. Fifteen other defendants facing various
charges in connection with the case were acquitted.

Samast, tried separately in a juvenile court, was convicted in July
2011, and sentenced to almost 23 years in prison for shooting Dink dead
in the street in front of the Istanbul offices of the Agos newspaper,
of which he was the founding editor. All the defendants are from the
Pelitli district of Trabzon, in Turkey’s eastern Black Sea region.

“The court’s treatment of the murder as a straightforward crime
committed in isolation by a few young men belies the evidence of their
deep connections with the security forces,” Sinclair-Webb said. “It
ignored the systematic failure by the Istanbul and Trabzon police
and gendarmerie to take steps to try to prevent a murder they were
repeatedly informed would happen,”

The final statement of the prosecutor in the trial pointed to the
existence of a criminal network, with links to the ultranationalist
Ergenekon gang, among whose alleged members are state officials
and members of the security forces who are currently on trial for
plotting a coup. The prosecutor indicated that the evidence to prove
the Ergenekon gang connection had been destroyed. But the prosecutor’s
investigation failed to follow many leads or to push for the inquiry
to be broadened, Human Rights Watch said. The prosecutor, as well as
lawyers for the Dink family, said they will appeal.

Tuncel had worked as an informer for both the Trabzon police and
the gendarmerie. The Trabzon police and gendarmerie, and police in
Istanbul, were repeatedly alerted to a plot to kill Dink, but failed
to take measures to prevent it.

The prosecutor’s investigation failed to press for the prosecution
of state authorities who repeatedly withheld evidence during the
investigation and contaminated other evidence. Both the prosecutor and
the court in turn failed at every stage to use the authority of the
criminal justice system to secure the compliance of state authorities
in a criminal investigation and murder trial proceedings.

Dink, the founding editor of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian
newspaper Agos, was a courageous champion of open debate, dialogue,
and cooperation among all communities in Turkey, and was committed
to democratization and human rights. His killing was apparently
politically and ethnically motivated. He was identified by
his murderers as an Armenian who had been convicted in court for
“insulting Turkishness.”

Dink had been prosecuted for an article in which he discussed Armenian
identity. In July 2006, the General Penal Board of the Court of
Cassation, Turkey’s court of appeal, upheld a six-month suspended
sentence for that publication under Article 301 of the Turkish penal
code that criminalized “publicly insulting Turkishness.” Dink was
prosecuted again in September 2006, under the same provision, for
using the term “genocide” in a statement made to the Reuters news
agency to describe the massacres of Armenians in Anatolia at the end
of the Ottoman Empire.

In September 2010, the European Court of Human Rights delivered a
tough verdict against Turkey for failure to protect Dink’s life,
failure to investigate his murder, and failure to uphold his right
to freedom of expression.

“The government has a clear duty to implement the judgment of
the European Court, to cooperate fully to ensure that the full
circumstances of state collusion in Dink’s murder are thoroughly
investigated and that state officials are not protected,” said
Sinclair-Webb.

Expert: "Turkey Has Lost Its Hope Towards Europe And Is Concentrated

EXPERT: “TURKEY HAS LOST ITS HOPE TOWARDS EUROPE AND IS CONCENTRATED TOWARDS THE MIDDLE EAST”

18.01.12

Artak Shaqaryan, expert on Turkey, held a press-conference today.

Speaking about the Armenian-Turkish relations he noted that Turkey
tries to activate relations with Armenia when one country starts
to discuss the recognition of Armenian Genocide or when the next
anniversary of Armenian Genocide approaches.

“As April 24 is coming, Turks start to activate in order to show the
whole world that “everything is normal and we are still negotiating”,”
the speaker said and noted that 2015 will be psychological border for
Turkey and they will try just to register some progress even only on
the paper.

The expert referred to the spread mistake according which there is
100 year term for the genocides and if 2015 passes everything is lost.

“It is not true. Armenian nation will claim to recognize Armenian
Genocide also on 2016. The struggle will not be stopped.”

Speaking about the opening of Armenian-Turkish border the expert
reminded that Armenian side is ready but we can not say the same
Turkey as well. “Initiative of opening Armenian-Turkish border is in
Turkish hands. We are ready to go ahead but it never means that we
will refuse our just struggle for Armenian Genocide recognition. But
also does mean that we will make it a precondition,” Shaqaryan noted.

Speaking about Hrant Dink’s murder the speaker announced that Turkish
court could do more than it did.

“Yesterday mass media presented that Dink’s killer has at last
been punished, but unfortunately many criminals remained without
punishment”, the expert noted and added that Turkish court covered
the reality.

Shaqaryan also informed that “Amnesty International” organization also
referred to the Dink’s murder and gave a clear conclusion according
which “Turkey failed to restore justice in this case”.

“Only two people have been arrested during the court trial which have
lasted five years. But despite they are arrested they are considered
to be the heroes in their country. Turkish court covered the reality
and only the people who had shot at Dink were arrested. But the other
organizers are unpunished now”.

Commenting on French-Turkish strained relations the expert said that
the “cold war” is for the leadership in the Northern Africa.

“Turkey ahs no hopes concerning Europe any more and now is concentrated
towards the Middle East and Northern Africa is the part of it. But
this territory has always been under French supervision”, Shaqaryan
underlined.

The speaker also hoped that French Senate will accept bill on
criminalization of Armenian Genocide.

http://times.am/?l=en&p=3870

"If Only Everyone" Film – An Objective Response To Artsakh War: (VID

“IF ONLY EVERYONE” FILM – AN OBJECTIVE RESPONSE TO ARTSAKH WAR: (VIDEO)

ARMENPRESS
JANUARY 18, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, JANUARY 18, ARMENPRESS: “If only everyone” film, which tells
about the Artsakh war and is dedicated to Armenia’s independence and
20th anniversary of the Armenian Army, will be shown on the big screen
from January 27.

“The idea of shooting a film developed long ago,” said film’s
General Producer Michael Poghosyan in an interview with Armenpress’
correspondent. He noted the film is a unique response to the Artsakh
war, to the settled and still unsettled issues originated in its
consequence. Natalia Belyauskene is the director of the film.

According to the producer of “If only everyone”, the film proves
that there are no winners in war, as very often innocent people die
in consequence of wars. “It is easy to get fury, but we have tried to
look upon everything objectively, as we fought for what belonged to
us,” said Mr. Poghosyan. He confessed that the topic of the Artsakh
war has always been up-to-date for him, and the main goal of screening
of the film is not to tell about war, but about peace, which has been
acquired at high price. The general producer would not be against if
the film was shown in Baku, too.

“The preliminary works of “If only Everyone” film have lasted nearly
2 years. The screening of the film has been implemented under the
high patronage of Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, with the support
of NKR President Bako Sahakyan, Armenian Ministries of Defense and
Culture and National Cinema Center of Armenia – on the initiative of
TIM production. The premiere of the film for MM representatives will
be held January 25, and beginning from January 27 the film will be
shown in the cinemas of the capital.