Recep Tayyip Erdogan has made a visit of condolence to the family of

Recep Tayyip Erdogan has made a visit of condolence to the family of Hrant Dink

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.01.2007 14:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has
made a visit of condolence to the family of ‘Agos’ editor-in-chief
Hrant Dink, the Turkish-Armenian journalist who was gunned down
on Friday. He offered his condolences to Rakel Dink, the wife of
the slain journalist, and other family members, Cihan News Agency
reports. No press members were allowed inside the house. Erdogan
stayed over one hour at Dink’s residence, much longer than the visit,
which had been planned as 20 minutes. Turkish premier then proceeded
to the Armenian Patriarchate located in the Kumkapi quarter, also
located on the European side of the city. He met Patriarch Mesrob
II and extended his condolences to the spiritual leader of Armenian
community living in Istanbul.

PM Erdogan could not attend the funeral of Dink on Tuesday since
he, along with his Italian counterpart Romano Prodi, was attending
the opening ceremony of a tunnel connecting capital Ankara and
Istanbul. Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul did not attend Dink’s
funeral too.

PACE adopts an unprecedented resolution for Armenia

PACE adopts an unprecedented resolution for Armenia

ArmRadio.am
24.01.2007 12:40

Last night, at 23:00 Yerevan time in its first session of 2007
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe completed the
discussion of accomplishment of Armenia’s commitments. Chairman of
the National assembly of Armenia Tigran Torosyan informed that "an
unprecedented resolution for Armenia was adopted in the result of
discussions held in an unprecedented positive atmosphere." Three
amendments proposed by the Armenian delegation have also been
adopted. Other details are not known yet.

Turkish Media: Dink Was Killed By Members Of Nationalist Group

TURKISH MEDIA: DINK WAS KILLED BY MEMBERS OF NATIONALIST GROUP

Ankara, January 22. ArmInfo. Journalist Hrant Dink was killed by a
nationalist group of youths led by Yasin Hayal, reports RIA Novosti
referring to Turkish mass media.

Milliyet reports that 17-year-old Ogun Samast, suspected murderer,
got his gun from Hayal.

In 2004 Hayal organized an explosion in McDonald’s cafe
in Trabzon. After arrest he shouted: "I did it to punish the
Americans, when I get out of the jail I will blow up HSBC and Russian
Consulate." Some sources say that Hayal has been trained by Chechen
fighters.

Dogan news agency reports that after arrest Samast said: "I don’t
regret. I read in the internet that Dink said that Turkish blood is
dirty blood and I decided to kill him."

La Turquie choquee par l’assassinat du journaliste Hrant Dink

Le Monde, France
21 janvier 2007 dimanche

La Turquie choquée par l’assassinat du journaliste Hrant Dink

par Sophie Shihab (avec Celian Mace à Paris)

Militant de la mémoire arménienne, l’éditorialiste, qui se savait
menacé depuis plusieurs semaines, a été tué par balles à Istanbul

Moins de deux semaines avant d’être abattu par balles, vendredi 19
janvier à Istanbul, le journaliste turc arménien Hrant Dink s’était
déclaré menacé. " Ma messagerie est pleine de phrases de haine et de
menaces. Je suis comme un pigeon. Je marche en regardant devant et
derrière moi… ", confiait-il dans le dernier de ses éditoriaux paru
dans Agos, l’hebdomadaire bilingue – turc et arménien – qu’il avait
créé en 1996.

Devenu la voix la plus connue de sa communauté – les 60 000 Arméniens
vivant encore en Turquie, presque tous à Istanbul -, il parlait sans
détour du " génocide " de 1915, que les autorités turques récusent.
Il fut pour cela plusieurs fois poursuivi par la justice de son pays,
devenant une cible de choix des cercles nationalistes. Il fut aussi
le seul intellectuel turc de renom à être condamné " pour insulte à
l’identité turque ", se voyant infliger six mois de prison avec
sursis. Les autres victimes de telles poursuites ont échappé aux
condamnations.

Son assassinat a provoqué un choc en Turquie, où nul ne semble douter
qu’il s’agisse d’un crime politique, dernier d’une longue série dans
le pays. Il fut unanimement condamné vendredi, y compris par des
politiciens nationalistes, inquiets de l’image donnée à l’étranger.
Dès la nouvelle connue, les deux grandes chaînes télévisées privées,
CNN-Türk et NTV, ont lancé des éditions spéciales. Elles ont duré
jusqu’à la nuit, alors que des manifestants protestaient toujours,
sous la pluie, devant le siège du journal Agos.

C’est à la porte de l’immeuble, dans le centre d’Istanbul, que Hrant
Dink, 53 ans, fut atteint par les balles et tué sur le coup.

L’assaillant, un jeune homme dont la silhouette fut captée par une
caméra de surveillance, s’est enfui. Le corps est resté plus d’une
heure couvert d’une bche, isolé par la police des centaines de
personnes qui s’amassaient, dont des membres visiblement choqués de
la communauté arménienne. Une marche a regroupé 2 000 personnes, sous
une banderole proclamant : " Nous sommes tous Hrant Dink ".

Des centaines de personnes ont aussi manifesté à Ankara. Et des
militants ont scandé des slogans contre " l’Etat assassin ", alors
qu’un avocat de la victime, Erdal Dogan, affirmait que Dink avait
reçu des menaces de mort et écrit à ce sujet une lettre aux
autorités, sans recevoir de réponse. Un de ses collègues, Aydin
Engin, a précisé que Dink attribuait ces menaces à " l’Etat profond "
– terme usité pour désigner ce qui serait d’obscurs et puissants
réseaux ultranationalistes au sein des structures sécuritaires.

Trois suspects ont été détenus, a annoncé dans la soirée le
gouverneur d’Istanbul. " Nous sommes très proches de résoudre
l’affaire. Nous avons des preuves – documents, images, témoignages ",
a déclaré Muammer Güler. Auparavant, le premier ministre turc, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, avait promis de tout faire pour trouver les coupables
de ce qu’il a appelé une attaque contre " l’unité, la stabilité, la
liberté de parole et la vie démocratique " en Turquie.

Le thème de la " provocation " pour nuire à la Turquie est souvent
revenu sur CNN-Türk et NTV, où l’on a dénoncé un crime " honteux ",
mais aussi " embarrassant ". Le ministre des affaires étrangères,
Abdullah Gül, a présenté des condoléances " tout particulièrement à
la communauté arménienne et à la famille de Hrant Dink ", mais le
premier ministre n’a pas omis de préciser que " ce crime a été commis
au moment où les accusations arméniennes de génocide sont reprises
dans certains pays ".

Le vote du Parlement français, en novembre 2006, pour pénaliser la
négation du génocide arménien – après la reconnaissance du génocide
en 2001 – avait provoqué une nouvelle crise entre Paris et Ankara, où
l’on craint à présent une reconnaissance du génocide par le nouveau
Congrès américain, dominé par les démocrates.

Hrant Dink, militant de la démocratisation en Turquie autant que du
devoir de mémoire, critiquait ceux qui exploitent le passé arménien à
des fins électorales et ceux qui veulent pénaliser le déni du
génocide – démarche à laquelle il s’opposait.

A Paris, l’un de ses avocats, Feytiye Cetin, a appelé " ceux qui
veulent trouver ses assassins à bien lire son dernier éditorial ",
écrit alors qu’il n’avait pas reçu de protection de l’Etat malgré ses
plaintes, ajoutant : " Le rôle de l’Etat est de protéger ses
citoyens, pas d’en faire des cibles, comme cela fut le cas pour Hrant
Dink. "

ANKARA: Murderer of Hrant Dink Captured

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
Jan 21 2007

Murderer of Hrant Dink Captured

Sunday , 21 January 2007

On Saturday evening, January 20, the lead suspect for Hrant Dink’s
assassination, Ogün Samast, was captured by gendarmarie with the
murder weapon on him, while traveling from Istanbul to Hopa. Ahmet
Samast, who works as a cleaner at the Pelitli municipality, went to
the police after seeing his son’s image on TV , and reported him. The
police took Ogün under custody, as well as his close friend Yasin
Hayal and six others. In 2004 Hayal was tried for setting a bomb at a
McDonald’s in Trabzon. As a part of a detailed investigation, police
are checking 32 computers at the internet cafe the suspect used to
visit.

In the first interrogation session, Samast confessed to the
assassination. In hopes of furthering the investigation, police
brought him back to Istanbul. Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoðan
congratulated security forces at a press conference at midnight.

Istanbul Governor Muammer Güler told the Istanbul press that the
assassin was caught within 32 hours thanks to solid evidence,
including CCTV footage from security cameras at the scene. Criminal
investigation results show that the weapon suspect used was a
hand-made 7.65-caliber gun.

Five flights to Istanbul in last two weeks

Ogün Samast who confessed to the murder of Hrant Dink during the
first interrogation session in Samsun, turned out to have visited
Istanbul five times during the past two weeks, according to flight
records. The suspect, who traveled via a private flight company, left
Trabzon’s Pelitli town three days before the assassination took
place. The 17-year-old suspect left school in 2nd grade and turned
out to be unemployed.

Played soccer at Pelitlispor

The prime suspect in assassination, Ogün Samast, played for the
amateur soccer club Pelitlispor. Samast, who was caught with the
assassination handmade-weapon in Samsun, was the same age as O.A. who
assassinated the priest Santaro at Trabzon in February 2006. Samast’s
father and mother live separately.

UPI: Reported confession in Dink’s death

United Press International
Jan 21 2007

Reported confession in Dink’s death

Jan. 21, 2007 at 7:25AM

The teenager accused of killing Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
Dink in Istanbul has reportedly confessed and said he has no regrets
for the act.
The official Turkish news agency, Anatolia, says 17-year-old
Ogun Samast made the comment after his arrest Saturday. The youth’s
father identified him from a video of the Friday shooting and tipped
off police.
Dink, who was editor of the Agos newspaper, was shot outside
the newspaper’s office. He had received death threats for his
writings about the killing of Armenians in Turkey from 1915 to 1915,
a controversial topic in Turkey.
Istanbul Gov. Muammer Guler said Samast was arrested on a bus
in Samsun on his way to Trabzon, Turkey.
CNN reported at least a dozen other people were being held in
Dink’s death in Trabzon and six of them were going to be brought to
Istanbul Sunday for questioning.

HEC: Moments of Sorrow

HEC PRESS RELEASE
—————————

Hellenic Electronic Center (HEC)

A Non-Profit Organization Registered in the US
Representing 35,000 Hellenes and
34 Hellenic associations in the US and abroad

January 21, 2007

The Executive Council of the Hellenic Electronic Center (HEC) and all
of its members throughout the world wish to extend their sympathies
and support to our grieving Armenian brothers and sisters following
the brutal and unprovoked murder of Hrant Dink by a Turkish extremist
in Constantinople. We wish to express our admiration and respect for
the bravery shown by Mr. Dink who fought for justice and historical
truth in advocating for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide. His
vivid example will serve as an inspiration to writers throughout the
civilized world who use words as their weapon against the brutality
and terror which are the characteristics of all authoritarian
governments such as The Turkish government.

Mr. Dink was the victim of the terrorism that is rampant in Turkey,
that is both tolerated and supported by the Turkish authorities. The
hatred directed against the Armenian, Assyrian, and Greek minorities
in Turkey up to the present day is a reality demonstrated by Ankara’s
Genocide trends and denials. The tragic and horrible murder of
Mr. Dink by one fanatical extremist has as its origins the official
Genocide denial that is the official stance of the Turkish government
and its representatives.

We extend our condolences to the family of Mr. Dink, and to the whole
Armenian nation worldwide. Additionally, we are more than ever,
greatly concerned for the destiny and well being of the remaining
members of the Armenian, Assyrian, and Greek communities within
Turkey.

HEC Executive Council

www.greece.org

Washington Condemns Hrant Dink’s Assassination

PanARMENIAN.Net

Washington Condemns Hrant Dink’s Assassination
20.01.2007 14:45 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The United States expressed concern
over the murder in Istanbul of Turkish-Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink. `Clearly this is a tragic
incident,’ U.S. State Department deputy spokesman Tom
Casey told reporters when asked about Dink. Casey said
that while he had no information on who was
responsible and that Turkish authorities were still
investigating the shooting, Dink’s slaying `does raise
some concerns’ for the U.S., The Zaman reports.

Hrant Dink: an OpenDemocracy tribute

Open Democracy, UK
Jan 19 2007

Hrant Dink: an openDemocracy tribute

Isabel Hilton
Anthony Barnett
19 – 1 – 2007

openDemocracy’s Anthony Barnett and Isabel Hilton pay tribute to
Turkish journalist and democrat, Hrant Dink who was murdered today in
Istanbul.

In his first article for openDemocracy Hrant Dink observed that "the
relationship between Turkey and the EU is governed less by reciprocal
desire than by fear". His conclusion: "Do not fear".

Now the sentiments that he addressed without fear have led to his
assassination. Turkey is a European country. Its Ottoman past is
deeply formed by its Byzantine Christian heritage, while modern
Europe has been shaped by its long arguments with the Turk. Today, as
trade, tourism and migration bring the two parts of Europe together,
people on both sides fear and resist the implication of their shared
legacy.

Hrant Dink (1954 – 2007)
A brave and kindly man in his early fifties Hrant was shot down
outside the office of his journal Agos. This is a bilingual,
Armenian-Turkish publication. The bitter tragedy of his death is that
Agos was an expression of his dedication to a debate not with Turkish
nationalists but with his fellow Armenians. He felt that they were
too much in the grip of the Armenian diaspora’s obsession with the
genocide that followed the first world war. He wanted to talk, write
and publish about it freely and honestly, of course. But with the
hope of this allowing Armenians to become normal, healthy citizens of
a modern democratic Turkey.

This approach threatens the purist nationalists of Turkey. They, it
now seems, have got their man.

The last time I saw Hrant was last summer in Istanbul. Like many who
had spoken and written about his country’s history with the Armenians
he had been accused of "insulting Turkishness". Unlike most of them
whose charges had been dismissed, he had been found guilty and given
a suspended sentence. We discussed his determination to take his
appeal to the European Court of Human Rights, and the costs. Now it
has lost its chance to overturn the verdict.

– Anthony Barnett

***

When, in October 2005, Hrant Dink was given a six month suspended
sentence for an allegedly anti-Turkish statement, he was outraged. As
an Armenian, he pointed out, he had been fighting racism all his life
and had never belittled either Turkish or Armenian identity.

Hrant Dink was one of Turkey’s most prominent Armenian citizens. He
was convicted for an article he wrote for the bilingual
Armenian-Turkish weekly, Agos, which he edited, in which he discussed
the continuing impact of the killings of hundreds of thousands of
Armenians by the Ottoman army in 1915-17. The issue remains highly
contentious: the Turkish state refuses to acknowledge that this was
genocide and Hrant Dink was among a group of Armenian writers and
intellectuals who sought, through discussion, to defuse tensions
between the Armenian diaspora and Turkey.

Hrant Dink was subsequently prosecuted for "insult to the Turkish
state", a charge that carried a possible six months imprisonment. The
charges derived from remarks at a conference on "Global Security,
Terror and Human Rights, Multi-culturalism, Minorities and Human
Rights", held in 2002 in Sanliurfa. Dink, an Armenian, had been asked
about how he felt when, at primary school, he had, like all fellow
pupils, to recite the words: "I am a Turk, I am honest, I am
hardworking". He had responded that although he was honest and
hardworking, he was not a Turk. It was enough to land him in court,
prosecuted in a wave of trials brought by far right interests against
writer, journalists and public intellectuals in Turkey in the last
two years.

His shocking murder in Istanbul today will be seen in the light of
these attacks on free speech and freedom of thought in Turkey.

– Isabel Hilton

"I am an Armenian of Turkey, and a good Turkish citizen. I believe in
the republic, in fact I would like it to become stronger and more
democratic. I don’t want my country to be divided, but I want all the
citizens to be able to live fully and contribute their diversity to
this society – as a source of richness."

– (Hrant Dink, 2006)

Hrant Dink (1954 – 2007) was born in Malatya, a city in the eastern
Anatolian region of Turkey. At the age of seven he moved with his
family to Istanbul, where he spent the rest of his life. He received
his early education in Armenian community and boarding schools, later
going on to study in the zoology and philosophy departments at the
university of Istanbul. After graduating he pursued a career as a
journalist and activist for Armenian civil rights in Turkey.

>From a young age he was aware of the taboo subject of the "Armenian
issue": "We all have an intuition about something broken in the past.
It’s in our genetic code. Each Armenian family has losses that go
back to the time when survivors were scattered all over the world."

He describes his experience growing up with both Turkish and Armenian
identity as: "I didn’t know what it meant to be Turkish or Armenian.
At school in Istanbul, I recited the Turkish credo every morning, but
I was also told I should preserve my Armenian identity. I never came
across my own name in school books – only Turkish names."

Years later as a teenager, he would hear "the word ‘Armenian’ used as
a swearword." As an adult he would face direct discrimination: "I saw
high-court decisions that referred to Armenians as ‘foreigners living
in Turkey’. The Armenian orphanage that I worked so hard to establish
was confiscated by the state."

Despite this, he refused to leave Turkey, and instead campaigned hard
to promote better relations between the Turkish and Armenian
communities:

"My identity was always other, and often belittled. I saw again and
again that I was different. Many people who were like me were leaving
this country, but I didn’t want to leave – I wanted to stay and fight
for what I thought was right."

In 1996 he founded, became editor-in-chief and columnist of Agos
(translation: "ploughed furrow"), an Istanbul-based weekly newspaper
published in both Armenian and Turkish. It was briefly suspended in
2001.

In April 2004 he gave a speech at the UN Commission on Human Rights
on freedom of expression in Turkey. He identified many continuing
problems but his words had a positive note:

"the tendency of many Turkish intellectuals to learn Armenian
history, problems and culture, to discuss them and to see Armenian
community as a richness for the country, gives hope for the future by
creating a sound demand right from the bottom to the top."

In recent years Hrant was charged a number of times under the strict
Turkish penal code for "denigrating Turkey" and "insulting Turkish
identity". His cases included a trial on 28 April, 2005 about a
speech he gave at a human rights and minorities conference in 2002, a
conviction on 7 October, 2005 to a six-month suspended sentence for
an article on the Armenian diaspora published in Agos, an interview
given to the Reuters news agency on 14 July, 2006 where he spoke
candidly about his opinions on the events of 1915.

Of his October 2005 conviction he said:

"I was found guilty of racism. How can this be? All my life I have
struggled against ethnic discrimination and racism. I would never
belittle Turkishness or Armenianness. I wouldn’t allow anyone else to
do it, either."

It is reported that on 10 January he wrote an article for Agos
expressing his worry at the large number of threatening letters and
emails he was receiving and his dismay at the lack of concern shown
by the Istanbul police.

He was killed on 19 January by an unidentified gunman outside the
central-Istanbul offices of Agos.

***

Hrant Dink wrote two articles for openDemocracy:

"The water finds its crack: an Armenian in Turkey" (13 December, 2005)

"Orhan Pamuk’s epic journey" (16 October, 2006)

nt_dink_4266.jsp

http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-turkey/hra

ANKARA: Who killed the Turkish editor Hrant Dink?

Journal of Turkish Weekly
Jan 20 2007

Who killed the Turkish editor Hrant Dink?
Baris Sanli

Saturday , 20 January 2007

The bitterness diffused to everyone. For days, it has been cold and
dry in Ankara, yesterday the weather showed its mild face and rained
a bit. The rain, as if the clouds have cried, has added to this
bitterness.

Last night to this morning, whomever I talked, everyone expressed
his/her condemnations. From the mail list, there was this sense of
denial. The conspiracy machines were working at full speed. It is a
belief that most of the Turks think that this is completely an act
against Turkey and Turkey’s thesis. Even ultra-nationalists are
thinking this way.

What is the best time to expect such a horrible act like killing an
Armenian writer? I thought, in the 1980s, when ASALA was at large,
the attacks to the Armenian society was more likely. But that never
happened. This time, a Turkish Armenian editor, who is human, modest
and intellectual, has been shot dead.

I am personally very sorry, first of all another Turk has died.
Secondly, an adversary of mine has died. The readers of my column,
Turkish Chilli, will remember my sarcastic articles about Armenians.
I am quite successful irritating every Armenian.

One thing everyone has to ask himself is what the murderers have
aimed? A greater Turkey? To rotten Armenian allegations through the
blood of an editor who supports dialog? Greater nationalist aims?
Punishing?

At the end, from Military to hard core nationalists, everyone
condemned the incident, and acted as if it was a bullet to the heart
of Turkey. First of all a Turkish citizen has been killed, secondly a
sui generis Turkish citizen has been killed who defended Turkey in
France. In this sense he was more Turk than opposing
ultra-nationalists.

The post-Ottoman Turkish identity in general is defined by Ataturk’s
famous proverb: `How happy is the one who says I am a Turk’. He
doesn’t say `How happy is the one who is a Turk’. So, anyone who
identifies himself as a Turk, may not be an ethnic Turk. If someone
says I am a Turk, then he/she is a Turk, according to Ataturk.

The nationalist idea does not make you a Turk, but how you define
yourself, what you did for your country counts. With this logic and
his efforts in France against Armenian aims and his love for this
land, makes him a Turkish nationalist which the protesters against
him can only dream of. We will remember his name, but not his
protestors.

So who killed him? The popular rumours in Ankara are those: First
suspect is a foreign intelligence service, who is against Turkey’s EU
accession. This service has been accused of carrying out killings in
Turkey like Necip Hablemitoglu’s murder and provoking inter-ethnic
clashes. Also this intelligence organization’s name is related to
Sivas incident.

Second is, this may be an incident stemming from disputes among
Armenian groups. Mr. Dink’s ideas were not in parallel with other
Armenian groups, especially with those living in Diaspora.

Ask yourself calmly as if he was alive. Who will benefit most from
his death? Turkey? Armenian Diaspora? Anti-Turkish EU camp? Or idiot
ultra-nationalist?

At the end, we will probably face Agca dilemma. The killer may be an
ordinary guy, who has nationalist links but not complete connection,
who doesn’t ask lots of question and claiming his motives as `to
serve Turkish nation’. He will not be rich, probably he will have
debts. He has probably been in different ideological circles but he
will lack any leadership skills or charisma. He will also show signs
of psychological disorders.

These are my ideas and may not be true. But if these are correct, he
will probably be a perfect candidate for `Dark hands’