ANKARA: Why was Hrant Dink killed?

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Jan 26 2007

Why was Hrant Dink killed?

by
MÜMTAZ’ER TÜRKÖNE

When an ordinary Turkish citizen lists possible reasons for the
assassination of Hrant Dink, his Armenian ethnic origin comes last.

The murder was shocking and was like a jolting earthquake, but it was
not triggered by ethnic enmity. This is what everybody was aware of
from the very beginning.
A tripartite picture was formed in the minds of ordinary Turkish
Muslims. These three details, which constituted a strong emotional
bond between Dink and the whole society, formed an identity. The
first detail was his last article titled "Anxiousness of a
Pigeon,"which was misunderstood and thus misused but still shows
Dink’s confidence and love for the society he lived in. In his last
article, Dink was saying he had been threatened for his statements,
which were interpreted completely differently from what he actually
meant, but at the same he was expressing his hope that Turkish
society would not harm ?pigeons’ like him, people who were helpless.
His anxieties, and the sense of security he portrayed to comfort
Turks, added a very tragic dimension to his murder. The society felt
the grief of killing the pigeon and the warmth of Dink’s heart at the
same time. Secondly, Dink’s body, lying face-down on the pavement,
was covered with journal paper with his legs visible. The footage
broadcast showed a hole in his shoes. A shoe-with-hole is a symbol of
poverty in Turkish society. Hrant Dink was poor and his dead body
lying on the pavement told of his poverty in the most natural form.
The third detail was his life story that complemented his worn shoes.
Dink was born in the eastern Anatolian city of Malatya and was sent
to an orphanage while he was still young. He was raised in an
orphanage and lacked the care of parents. These were three details
that drew the portrait of Dink, who sat in the limelight of 70
million people in Turkey before being assassinated. This was a
shocking portrait for the majority of people who sensed the world
through their emotions. The murder itself was shameful. The murder
incited a wave of compassion and sympathy against ethnic groups in
Turkey. This wave materialized in the slogan "We are all Hrant Dink"
and marked its seal during the funeral.
I attended the funeral and saw people gather in front of the office
of Agos newspaper to approach the funeral car. The spectrum of
attendees included figures from almost all walks of the society:
University students, retired people, housewives, workers,
intellectuals and marginal figures. All attendees had a shared
expression on their faces: to share the grief. They expressed their
grief in the slogan "We are all Hrant Dink. We are all Armenian." The
slogan was challenging: "If Hrant Dink was murdered because of his
Armenian origin and if it aims to intimidate and daunt Armenians by
killing Dink, the murderers will not achieve their goals. Because we
will take Dink’s place and oppose his murderers together with the
Armenian society." This challenging move was inspired by Germany in
1930s. In those years, liberal and socialist Germans challenged
oppression against Jews, which started during the Nazi
administration, with the slogan "We are all Jews."
Dark nature of the murder:
The funeral in front of the Agos office commenced with Dink’s wife,
Sakel Dink, addressing participants from the top of a bus. In a
trembling and excited voice, Mrs. Dink delivered a calming and
anger-soothing speech in the wake of "her beloved." What she said
about the murderer directed debates over the assassination. Mrs.
Dink’s striking statements placed the reasons behind this shocking
murder in a completely different direction. She was questioning the
conditions that created the murderer, not the murderer himself: "No
matter what the age of the murderer is, 17 or 27, he was once a baby
like every human being. You cannot reveal the reasons behind this
murder unless you question the dark world that created a murderer
from a baby." These statements were not welcomed by people who were
seeking political interests over Dink murder. A marginal leftist
party decorated the town of Beyoğlu, where Dink’s funeral was
held, with the pictures of Dink and the banners of the party. They
were in a rush to designate "rising nationalism" as the reason behind
the murder, instead of "a dark world." These political efforts, not
the murder itself, were attempting to create a crack in society that
would urge formation of cliques and polarization. Mrs. Dink’s speech
prevented such a crack and contributed to turning debates into a
discussion that might impede more assassinations.
The findings the police reached as well the statements of the murder
suspect and the accomplices broadcasted in the media reveals the
presence of an actual dark and morbid climate. A frantic hooligan in
a football match and the perpetrators of the murder had a similar
psyche. The perpetrators were unemployed youngsters from the Black
Sea city of Trabzon, where the birth rate is quite high. They were
spending most of their time in internet cafes and their only bond
with the outer world was through the Internet. There was a wide gap
between the poor world they were living in and the unreachable
imaginary world. It was impossible to fill this work by exerting
effort, but only through committing frantic acts that no one would
ever dare to do. The most viable short-cut for these teenagers, who
are incapable to grasp the notion of politics and to penetrate into
the world of ideologies, was to adhere to a great cause debated in
the society. Thus, they would become respected heroes and their
courage would be praised. This is the dark world Mrs. Dink is trying
to tell us.
A narrow and barren nationalism is rising in Turkey. Turkish has two
correspondences for the term "nationalism:" Nationalism and
neo-nationalism: Nationalism refers to the right-wing nationalism and
neo-nationalism to that of left wing. A kind of Third World
Socialism, a leftover of the Cold War period, is endorsed by Turkish
neo-nationalists who are closely linked with the state.
Neo-nationalism is an anti-imperialist, anti-American and nationalist
ideology. It was neo-nationalists who demanded the conviction of
Hrant Dink for "insulting Turkishness" and urged a campaign against
Nobel Prize laureate Orhan Pamuk by threatening him. Turkey’s ?lumpen
proletariat’ youngsters, who diverted from the mainstream and based
their policies on a morbid climate, were again these
neo-nationalists. Although they hold similar feeling and
inclinations, the nationalist cadres of the Nationalist Movement
Party (MHP) and the Grand Unity Party (BBP) oppose both
neo-nationalists and the violent atmosphere they have created. MHP
leader Devlet Bahçeli has always renounced and stopped violence over
the Kurdish problem, a very sensitive and concerning issue for the
MHP. He barred his followers from flowing into the streets, namely to
commit violent incidents. The BBP, another nationalist party which
separated from the MHP and harbored even more ardent youngsters,
holds a significant stance over the recent developments. Newspapers
have written that murderers and collaborators have formed within the
youth movement of the party.
I had an interview with BBP leader Muhsin Yazıcıoğlu
and it was published in the Jan. 27 edition of Zaman daily. I
reminded him about the accusations against his party and asked for a
response. He felt genuine grief at Dink’s murder and was outraged
over the accusations directed at him. He drew attention to the "dark
world of the murder" saying the handling of the murder as a social
problem, not a political one, was necessary to curtail violence. He,
furthermore, drew attention to those who were inflaming violence and
seeking political interests over the murder as well as extreme
leftists who turned Dink’s funeral into a political show.
As more information is revealed the picture becomes clearer. Dink’s
murder is an ordinary political assassination, not a violent action.
The assassin is a 17-year-old minor. This murder is the result of a
deep-rooted social problem, and acted upon by a group of
perpetrators. The people who attended the funeral had already proved
the problem was not ethnically and politically motivated. What falls
to every sensible person now is to question the dark world Mrs. Dink
pointed at, and to improve the social conditions that resulted in the
murder.

Armenian Football Delegation Off to Dusseldorf for UEFA Conference

ARMENIAN FOOTBALL DELEGATION OFF TO DUSSELDORF FOR UEFA CONFERENCE

Armenpress

YEREVAN, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS: A delegation of Armenian Football
Federation (AFF), headed by its president Ruben Hayrapetian, has left
today for Germany’s Dusseldorf, the venue of an UEFA conference that
will meet on Friday to elect its next president.

The two candidates are former French international Michel Platini
and the incumbent Lennart Johansson.

Johansson had indicated some time ago that he would not stand for
re-election but when it became apparent that Platini might be unopposed
the Swede changed his mind. Back in 2002 Platini had opted to stand
aside when Johansson announced his intention to run for a fourth term.

Michel Platini (51) is generally considered to be an ally of
FIFA President Sepp Blatter. From 1998 to 2002 Platini acted as a
Blatter’s personal adviser and has also sat on both the UEFA and
FIFA executive committees. He is also vice president of the French
Football Federation.

Last year Platini paid a brief visit to Armenia.

Johansson, a 77-year-old Swede, has held the post since 1990 and is
bidding for his fifth term.

The UEFA conference is also to decide the venue and the date of
Armenia versus Azerbaijan EURO-2008 qualifying matches. The Armenian
Federation spoke in favor of holding both games in Baku and Yerevan
ensuring full safety for Azeri players in Yerevan, but the proposal
was rejected by Azerbaijan.

Armenian economy again ranked most liberal in CIS

ARMENIAN ECONOMY AGAIN RANKED MOST LIBERAL IN CIS
Emil Danielyan 1/24/07

EurasiaNet, NY
Jan 24 2007

Armenia has received plaudits for possessing the most liberal
and open economy in the Commonwealth of Independent States, as
the country ranked a highly respectable 32nd in a recent survey on
economic freedom. However, government critics and a few independent
economists contend that the study does not accurately represent the
country’s economic conditions.

The survey, prepared by The Wall Street Journal and the Heritage
Foundation and released January 16, covered 157 countries. It found
an "impressive amount of freedom" in the Armenian economy, which is
still recovering from the Soviet collapse and remains hamstrung by
the unresolved conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Index of Economic Freedom rated economies in 10 areas, including
the extent of government involvement in economic affairs, trade and
monetary policy, property rights and business regulations. Armenia
received high scores in most of these categories, surpassing all
other non-Baltic ex-Soviet states in recent years’ rankings.

WSJ/Heritage researchers went farther this year, putting it ahead of
economic powers like France, Italy and South Korea.

"Armenia is ranked 19th freest among the 41 countries in the
European region," concluded the study. "Armenia’s score puts it
above Europe’s average — an impressive feat for an impoverished
landlocked country." It cited, among other things, low tax rates,
modest government expenditures, a fully private banking sector,
and tight government monetary policies.

The WSJ/Heritage appraisal is largely in tune with the findings
of similar studies. Armenia, for example, was judged to have the
most investor-friendly business environment in the CIS in a 2005
World Bank survey that assessed "the ease of doing business" around
the world. Also in 2005 the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD) said in a report that it leads the way in the CIS
transition to a market economy.

Armenia launched its reform efforts amid adverse circumstances. The
conflicts in Karabakh and elsewhere in the South Caucasus effectively
cut off the country from the outside world, causing its Gross Domestic
Product to shrink by half from 1992-1993. The Armenian economy began
its slow but steady recovery after a Russian-mediated truce stopped
the Armenian-Azerbaijani war for Karabakh in 1994.

According to government statistics, it grew in 2006 at a double-digit
rate for a sixth consecutive year. Official figures also suggest that
the poverty rate in the country fell from 56 percent to 35 percent
between 1999 and 2005.

The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund say Armenians are
finally reaping the benefits of free-market economics. "Armenia’s
economic performance has been impressive in recent years," the IMF’s
managing director, Rodrigo de Rato, said during a June 2006 visit
to Yerevan.

The Armenian government is certain to seize upon the WSJ/Heritage
survey as vindication of its economic policies. Meanwhile, government
critics, along with some independent experts, say that economic
appearances are deceiving in Armenia’s case. The country’s economic
environment is not as liberal as it is portrayed, due to weak rule
of law, endemic corruption, and a lack of judicial independence,
they contend. Government connections are still essential for doing
business, and virtually all local millionaire businessmen operate
with the support and protection of various government factions and
pro-establishment parties. The richest of them are believed to have
close ties with the country’s two most powerful men, President Robert
Kocharian and Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian.

"Armenia is the most centralized state in the region," said Hrant
Bagratian, a liberal economist who served as prime minister in
1993-1996. "Forty or so families control 58 percent of our GDP."

A controversy surrounding the redevelopment of Yerevan underscores
the weak protections for private property. Hundreds of city residents
were forcibly evicted and their homes bulldozed so that expensive
residential and office buildings could be built. The process has been
regulated by a 2002 government directive, despite a constitutional
provision requiring that urban renewal be governed by parliamentary
approved legislation. Armenia’s Constitutional Court declared the
redevelopment process unconstitutional in April 2006, but stopped
short of ordering the state to pay additional compensation to the
evicted families.

Government corruption is another serious problem hampering economic
activity and competition in the country. Armenia ranked 93rd out of 163
countries in the Berlin-based Transparency International’s most recent
Corruption Perception Index. Fearing retribution, local entrepreneurs
rarely challenge bribe solicitations by government officials. One of
them who did, the owner of a coffee importing company, is currently
standing trial on tax evasion charges that were leveled after his
public allegations of high-level corruption in the Armenian customs
service.

The Index of Economic Freedom acknowledges these problems, putting
Armenia’s scores in the Property Rights and Freedom from Corruption
categories well below the world’s average. But its authors’ assertion
that the low level of Armenian public spending is a blessing will
be dismissed by many local and Western economists. The Armenian
government’s 2006 tax revenues accounted for less than 16 percent
of GDP, an extremely low proportion even by ex-Soviet standards that
highlights the scale of tax evasion among the local rich.

Consequently, the government’s 2007 budget, projected at a record-high
$1.5 billion, will still be insufficient for meeting the basic needs
of the country’s public sector.

The World Bank and the IMF regard tax evasion as a key economic
challenge facing Armenia, pressing the authorities in Yerevan to
tackle the problem in earnest. Kocharian admitted its gravity at an
extraordinary meeting on January 10 with top government officials. "I
don’t see in the [tax collection] services sufficient energy to fight
against the shadow economy," he told them. "There is improvement,
but it can not be considered satisfactory in the existing situation."

Editor’s Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
political analyst.

BAKU: Armenian and Azerbaijani Parliamentarians Meet in Strasburg

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
Jan 22 2007

Armenian and Azerbaijani Parliamentarians Meet in Strasburg

Turan 22/01/2007 19:28

The PACE winter session opens today in Strasbourg. The determination
of Kosovo’s status will be among the main issues. This issue will
be discussed on Jan. 24 with the participation of UN special envoy
Martti Akhtisaari.

Patriarch Konstantinopolskii Bartholomew I will give a report about
dialogue between cultures and religions on Jan. 22.

A report about violence against children will be discussed on Jan.
23. The agenda also includes reports about the use of energy supply
as an instrument of political pressure, dangers in the lives and
freedoms of journalists, and tension in the relationships between
Russia and Georgia.

During the session Azerbaijan and Armenian parliamentary delegations
will meet on Jan. 25 at 2.00 p.m. to discuss the realization of PACE
Resolution No 1416 (2005) "On Conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh Region."

Al Jazeera: Thousands attend Dink funeral

Thousands attend Dink funeral

23 Jan 07
_ 7-38BE-4097-A008-CFBF3776310D.h
tm_
( 38BE-4097-A008-CFBF3776310D.htm)

Mourners held identical black-and-white signs reading "We are all
Hrant Dink" [AP]

The body of Hrant Dink, the Turkish Armenian editor killed last
Friday, has been transported across Istanbul to an Armenian church,
where the writer is to be buried.

Thousands of people filed through Istanbul behind the coffin on Tuesday
and mourners at the church broke into applause at the arrival of the
hearse carrying Dink’s coffin.

Despite a request from his family not to turn the funeral into
a protest, some mourners shouted: "Shoulder to shoulder against
fascism" and "Murderer 301" – referring to the the Turkish law that
had been used to prosecute Dink and others on charges of "insulting
Turkishness".

Earlier in the day mourners gathered outside the Agos newspaper office,
where Dink was shot, holding identical black-and-white signs reading
"We are all Hrant Dink" and "We are all Armenians".

Rakel, Dink’s widow, told thousands of mourners: "We are seeing off
our brother with a silent walk, without slogans and without asking
how a baby became a murderer."

White doves were released into the air and much of downtown Istanbul
was closed to traffic.

The funeral took place amid tight security as those following the
hearse walked the 8km distance from the Agos headquarters to the
church where Dink was to be burried.

Turkish media has criticised top politicians and armed forces chiefs
for not attending the funeral.

Cengiz Candar, a columnist in a Turkish newspaper, wrote: "If the
president, the prime minister and chief of the general staff came to
the funeral, I would be hopeful the state has given up on a lynching
culture and started to [practice] self-criticism."

"We especially belittle our minorities. We do not consider our citizens
of diverse ethnic groups as one of our own. We hate different points
of view"

Mehmet Ali Birand, Turkish commentator

Dink’s murder has stirred debate about nationalism in Turkey and has
been viewed with concern abroad, especially by the Armenian diaspora.

Police say Ogun Samast, a seventeen-year-old, has confessed to killing
Dink for "insulting" Turks and that Yasin Hayal, a friend of Samast,
has admitted that he incited Samast to kill Dink.

Samast is one of seven people allegedly in custody in connection with
Dink’s murder.

Aykut Cengiz Engin, Istanbul’s chief prosecutor, has said that
investigators have found no link between Friday’s murder and "known
ideological or separatist" illegal organisations, but added: "… we
are investigating in detail the possibility that it was carried out
by an organisation".

Article 301

Dink had been prosecuted for his views on the massacres of Armenians
by Ottoman Turks in 1915, which he called genocide.

He was given a suspended six-month jail sentence, under "Article 301",
last year for "insulting Turkishness".

Other writers and intellectuals in Turkey who have expressed the
view that Turkey should "face up" to its role in the massacres of
Armenians have come under similar criticism from nationalists.

Mehmet Ali Birand, a Turkish commentator, said: "We are all responsible
[for Dink’s murder]. We especially belittle our minorities. We do not
consider our citizens of diverse ethnic groups as one of our own. We
hate different points of view."

In recent years Turkey has undergone a number of reforms aimed at
preparing the country for EU membership.

A more liberal attitude to national minorities is one of the demands
made on Turkey by the EU.

Turkey denies claims that 1.5 million Armenians died in a genocide
at Ottoman Turkish hands, instead saying simply that large numbers
of both Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks perished.

But many foreign parliaments have passed laws recognising the massacres
as genocide.

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/F70690D
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/F70690D7-

ANKARA: Roads Leading To Peace Torpedoed With Killing Of Dink, Engin

Roads Leading To Peace Torpedoed With Killing Of Dink, Engin

Anatolian Times, Turkey
Jan 22 2007

ISTANBUL – "Roads leading to peace were torpedoed after assassination
of Dink," said Aydin Engin, a journalist and a close friend of Hrant
Dink, editor-in-chief of bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos,
on Saturday.

Speaking to journalists Engin said everybody emphasized his democratic
and pacifist personality after his death. "However, no attempt was
made to protect him before his death although he has very openly been
a target."

Engin said, "despite the promises that had been made to find the
perpetrators of similar incidents, they were never kept. The same
process will be experienced in this incident."

"We do not accuse anybody. Fanatic circles always attacked Hrant.
Those who wanted to prevent the Armenian Conference, and those who
attacked Dink in newspapers have salt in this bloody soup," he noted.

Erdal Dogan, lawyer of Hrant Dink, said Dink has been receiving
threats for 2.5 years.

"There has been hints for the past 2.5 years that this murder would
be committed," he added.

Turkey: Journalist’s death puts focus on nationalism

TURKEY: JOURNALIST’S DEATH PUTS FOCUS ON NATIONALISM
Yigal Schleifer 1/22/07

EurasiaNet, NY
Jan 22 2007

The murder of a prominent and outspoken ethnic Armenian journalist has
sent shock waves throughout Turkey, raising questions about whether
a recent nationalist upsurge has taken a violent turn. The killing
threatens to pose a serious challenge to the government’s already
embattled democratization and political reform efforts.

The journalist, Hrant Dink, was the editor of the bilingual
Turkish-Armenian weekly newspaper Agos and a vocal critic of Turkey’s
treatment of its religious minorities and of its policy of rejecting
claims that the mass killing of Armenians by the Ottoman Turks in
1915 was genocide.

Dink was put on trial several times for "insulting" Turkish identity
with his writings; in 2005 he was convicted in one of the cases and
handed a suspended six-month prison sentence.

The editor was shot three times in broad daylight near the entrance to
the newspaper’s offices in Istanbul on January 19. A teenage suspect
from the Black Sea city of Trabzon, Ogun Samast, has confessed to the
shooting, police have announced. Samast is not known to have links
to any militant organizations, according to officials.

"Those who created nationalist sentiment in Turkey have fed such
a monster that there are many youngsters on the streets who do not
find the … state nationalist enough and are ready to take the law
into their own hands," columnist Ismet Berkan wrote on January 20 in
Radikal, one of Turkey’s main dailies, about the murder.

The last few years have seen Turkey engaged in a deep internal
struggle. On the one hand, the country’s drive towards European
Union membership has resulted in significant political reforms,
particularly regarding democratization and human rights, and the
freeing up of the debate on what had previously been taboo subjects,
such as the 1915 killing of ethnic Armenians.

On the other hand, the EU-related reforms have been met with a strong
nationalist backlash. Nationalist lawyers and prosecutors, for example,
have been able to use a law, known as article 301, to charge writers
and journalists like Dink and Nobel Prize for Literature laureate Orhan
Pamuk with the crime of insulting the state as a way of stifling the
emerging debates and putting the brakes on Turkey’s EU bid.

"In a sense, both sides have been sharpening their axes, thinking
that the EU question is the final intellectual battle in Turkey,"
said Ali Carkoglu, a professor of political science at Istanbul’s
Sabanci University. "It touches on everything that is salient in
Turkish politics: the Islam vs. secularism debate, democratization
and the extent to which individual human rights are to be protected."

"These [anti-EU] groups seem to have nothing more than the argument
that some views are bad and should not be voiced," he added.

For many Turks, the killing of Dink harkens back to the turbulent
1970’s and 1980’s, when journalists and intellectuals were frequently
the victims of ideologically inspired violence. Although Turkey has
moved forward, some wonder whether Dink’s murder is an indication
that the political gains made over the last few years have yet to
be consolidated.

"By Turkish standards, [Dink] was playing in a way that the
nationalists were not used to. In a way, he took too many risks,
he underestimated his opponents," said Rifat Bali, an independent
Istanbul-based researcher who studies Turkey’s minority communities.

"The message of the murder is ‘You shut up, know your limits as an
Armenian or a non-Muslim and do not go public often and repeatedly,
otherwise it will turn out bad for you.’"

"Some of the ultranationalist core of Turkey has not changed,"
Bali continued. "It is a militant core that is ready, if necessary,
to murder its ideological opponents."

Unlike in the past, Turkey’s government promptly responded to the
murder, sending top officials to oversee the investigation. The quick
arrest of Samast is also being seen as positive sign, since in the
past perpetrators of such crimes were rarely caught. The teenager’s
father identified his son for the police after seeing a television
broadcast of a clip from a security camera that showed the gunman
fleeing the scene.

"A bullet has been fired at democracy and freedom of expression. I
condemn the traitorous hands behind this disgraceful murder," Prime
Minister Tayyip Erdogan said on television soon after Dink was
murdered. "This was an attack on our peace and stability."

But experts here say the murder poses a major challenge for the Turkish
government, led by the moderately Islamic Justice and Development
Party (AKP). With its EU bid already suffering — negotiations with
Brussels have been partially suspended since November — the killing
of a journalist who had already been the target of legal proceedings
that were strongly condemned by the EU will only increase the pressure
on Ankara and further tarnish its image in Europe. [For details,
see the Eurasia Insight archive].

"The image problem was already bad and this can only make it worse.

Turkey will be seen as a country not only curtailing freedom of
expression, but the country that can also produce people who will
assassinate writers and thinkers," said Suat Kiniklioglu, director
of the German Marshall Fund’s office in Turkey.

"The atmosphere that [prompted] this person to go after Hrant Dink
with a gun was really the result of the atmosphere created by the
trials brought on by article 301," Kiniklioglu said. "In that respect,
the government will need now to really take article 301 seriously."

Outside of the offices of Agos, an Armenian word that refers to a place
where a seed is growing, a makeshift memorial has been created near the
spot where Dink was gunned down. The night following the journalist’s
murder, a crowd of more than 100 people gathered at the site, at one
point some of them chanting, "We are all Hrant. We are all Armenians."

Armenian political leaders and the media have harshly condemned
the murder, with many arguing that the slaying indicates that
Turkey is ill-suited for membership in the European Union. On
January 22, a series of youth organizations marched to the European
Union’s mission in Yerevan to protest Dink’s death, with one placard
proclaiming "Turkey, your hands are in blood," the online news service
PanArmenian.Net reported.

A press release on the Agos website states that the Agos’s aim
was to promote understanding between Turkey and Armenia. Dink,
who founded the paper in 1996, used his last few columns to write
about his legal woes. "For me, 2007 is likely to be a hard year,"
he wrote in one column. "The trials will continue, new ones will be
started. Who knows what other injustices I will be up against."

In his final column, Dink wrote about the increasing amount of hate
mail he was getting, including one letter that scared him enough that
he went to a local prosecutor to ask for protection, although without
any luck.

Although he opposed the official Turkish position on the Armenian
question, Dink was also a strong critic of the Armenian Diaspora and
what he saw as its obsession with vilifying Turkey.

"I don’t know anyone else like him who raised his voice for minorities
and democracy in Turkey," commented Murat Celikkan, a veteran Turkish
journalist and human rights activist. "Intellectually he was a very
important figure for Turkey. We don’t have anyone else like him."

Editor’s Note: Yigal Schleifer is a freelance journalist based in
Istanbul.

Quake Jolts Eastern Turkey

Quake Jolts Eastern Turkey

January 21, 2007 — An earthquake measuring a magnitude of 5.0 jolted
the eastern Turkish province of Agri today.

There were no immediate reports of casualties, but a regional official
said several homes were demolished.

Turkish authorities said the epicenter of the tremor was at the town
of Tutak, near the borders with Armenia and Iran.

The Anatolia news agency reported that panicked residents rushed to
the streets.

(AP, AFP)

ANKARA: Prime Suspect of the Turkish Armenian editor Hrant

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
Jan 21 2007

Prime Suspect of the Turkish Armenian editor Hrant Dink’s murder has
been arrested

Saturday , 20 January 2007
TurkishWeekly Istanbul

The prime suspect of Hrant Dink’s murder has been caught in Samsun.
The suspect identified as Ogün Samast. By the police, he has been
caught at Samsun coach terminal at 23:00.

His pictures have been broadcasted through national TVs. Prime
Minister Erdogan said, his gun was also found and thanked to Police
department.

Hrant Dink, 53, was shot three times in the head outside the office
of his weekly newspaper Agos in Istanbul. He died almost immediately.
His murder brought swift condemnation from the prime minister, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, who despatched the interior and justice ministers to
the city as an investigation got under way.

Ogun Samast is registered to Trabzon and he has been identified by
his father and reported to police.

Istanbul Governer, Muammer Guler in a statement to press confirmed
the arrest. He said, Ogun Samast was born in 1990, Trabzon will be
brought to Istanbul. He said the white cap and gun used has also been
found. Mr. Guler said, he is unemployed and left the school after 8th
grade.

Turkish Weekly

Editor’s killing linked to murder of priest

Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
from the New York Times
Jan 22 2007

Editor’s killing linked to murder of priest

Sebnem Arsu in Istanbul, Turkey
January 22, 2007

TURKISH police have arrested a 17-year-old suspect in the killing of
a newspaper editor who championed Armenian rights, Turkish
authorities say.

The editor, Hrant Dink, 52, a Turk of Armenian descent, was shot on
Friday afternoon outside the office of his newspaper, Agos. A gunman
was recorded by a surveillance camera nearby, and the police appealed
to the public for help in identifying him.

On Saturday night, Ogun Samast was captured in the Black Sea port of
Samsun after his father recognised him from the video and notified
police in Trabzon, their home town, said the Governor of Istanbul
province, Muammer Guler.

"The suspect was captured in Samsun on a passenger bus destined to
Trabzon, together with all the evidence, including his gun and the
white beret" seen in the video, Mr Guler said.

Samast, an unemployed high school leaver who arrived in Istanbul a
week ago, admitted killing Dink, the Samsun police said.

The police are also looking into possible links between Samast and
the killing of a Catholic priest, Andrea Santaro, last February. The
assailant was a 16-year-old who, like the priest and Samast, was from
Trabzon.

The Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, on Saturday praised the
efforts of the security forces and expressed satisfaction that an
arrest had been made before Dink’s funeral tomorrow. "We’re going to
continue investigations with the same determination," he said,
stressing that the arrest was only the beginning.

Guler said at a news conference earlier on Saturday that Samast had
visited the Agos office on Friday. He apparently posed as a
university student hoping to meet Dink, whose secretary told the
young man he would need an appointment.

The secretary later saw him loitering outside the office before Dink
was attacked, Mr Guler said.

Kazim Kolcuoglu, head of the Istanbul Bar Association, noting that
Samast and the killer of Santaro were under the age of 18, said
minors in Turkey are used in murders because they face lower
penalties than an adult convicted of the same crime.

As a 17-year-old, Samast will be interrogated by a public prosecutor
instead of the police.

Dink’s murder has shocked Turkey. Mr Erdogan condemned the shooting
as a direct attack on Turkey’s stability. Some analysts saw the
killing as a politically motivated attack on Turkey’s progress toward
membership in the European Union, while others blamed a controversial
law under which Dink had been convicted of insulting Turkish national
identity.

Dink, who angered many in Turkey by challenging the official Turkish
version of the 1915 Armenian genocide, was given a six-month
suspended sentence. But in the eyes of many radical nationalists, it
made him a target.

The New York Times