Turkey Detains More in Bible Attack

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Associated Press

Turkey Detains More in Bible Attack

By BENJAMIN HARVEY 04.19.07, 7:29 AM ET

Police detained five more suspects Thursday in the deaths of three men
who were found with their throats slit in a publishing house that
prints Bibles, the latest in a string of attacks targeting Christians
in the mostly Muslim country.

The arrests brought to 10 the number of suspects in custody, all
people in their late teens or early 20s, said Halil Ibrahim Dasoz,
governor of Malatya, the city in central Turkey where the killings
took place.

Malatya is known as hotbed of Turkish nationalism and as the hometown
of Mehmet Ali Agca, the gunman who tried to assassinate Pope John Paul
II in 1981.

Local media said five suspects detained Wednesday were college
students who were living at a residence that belongs to an Islamic
foundation. Some of those suspects told investigators they carried out
the killings to protect Islam, a Turkish newspaper reported.

"We didn’t do this for ourselves, but for our religion," Hurriyet
newspaper quoted one suspect as saying. "Our religion is being
destroyed. Let this be a lesson to enemies of our religion."

Turkey, a predominantly Muslim country bidding for EU membership, has
been criticized for not doing enough to protect its religious
minorities and to check rising Turkish nationalism and hostility
toward non-Muslims.

The three victims – a German and two Turkish citizens – were found
with their hands and legs bound and their throats slit at the Zirve
publishing house.

All were employees of the publishing house, which printed Bibles and
Christian literature, had been targeted previously in protests by
nationalists who accused it of proselytizing in this officially
secular country.

The German man had been living in Malatya since 2003, the mayor
said. Anatolia identified him as 46-year-old Tilman Ekkehart Geske.

"Nothing can excuse such an attack that comes at a time of great need
for peace, brotherhood and tolerance," President Ahmet Necdet Sezer
said.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan described the attack as
"savagery."

The five suspects detained Wednesday had each had been carrying copies
of a letter that read: "We five are brothers. We are going to our
deaths. We may not return," according to the state-run Anatolia news
agency.

Police said one suspect underwent surgery for head injuries after he
apparently tried to escape by jumping from a window.

Making up less than 1 percent of Turkey’s 70 million people,
Christians have increasingly become targets amid what some fear is a
rising tide of hostility toward non-Muslims.

In February 2006, a teenager fatally shot a Catholic priest as he
prayed in his church, and two more Catholic priests were attacked
later in the year. A November visit by Pope Benedict XVI was greeted
by nonviolent protests, and early this year a gunman killed Armenian
Christian editor Hrant Dink.

Authorities had vowed to deal with extremist attacks after Dink’s
murder, but Wednesday’s assault showed the violence was not slowing
down.

"The killing is a result of provocations in Turkey against
minorities," said Orhan Kemal Cengiz, a lawyer for one of the victims,
Necati Aydin. "Intolerance in general has been rising sharply in
Turkey."

The attack came ahead of presidential elections next month, a contest
that highlights fears among Turkey’s secular establishment that a
candidate from Erdogan’s Islamic-rooted party, or even Erdogan
himself, could win the job and strengthen Islamic influence on the
government.

Last weekend, hundreds of thousands of pro-secular protesters
demonstrated in the capital, Ankara. Erdogan has rejected the label of
"Islamist," citing his commitment to the EU bid.

The Vatican’s envoy to Turkey, Mons. Antonio Lucibello, told Italian
daily Il Messaggero that he thought the attack was a "sporadic event."

"We are not afraid. I’m not afraid," he said.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier condemned the attack
"in the strongest terms," and said he expected Turkish authorities
would "do everything to clear up this crime completely and bring those
responsible to justice."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrat Party – which
opposes Turkey’s bid to join the EU – said the attacks showed the
country’s shortcomings in protecting religious freedoms.

A group of 150 lit candles and unfolded a banner that read "We are all
Christians" in downtown Istanbul but the numbers were far less than
with Dink’s murder, which was followed by widespread protests and
condemnations. More than 100,000 people marched at Dink’s funeral.

Associated Press writers Selcan Hacaoglu and Suzan Fraser in Ankara
contributed to this report.

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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