Armenia’s Mine Curse

ARMENIA’S MINE CURSE
By Gegham Vardanian in Aygehovit

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
March 1 2007

Thirteen years after the ceasefire in the Karabakh war landmines in
Armenia are still killing people.

The village of Aygehovit on Armenia’s north-eastern border with
Azerbaijan is home to 3,400 people and blessed with wheat fields,
green pastures and orchards. The trouble is that because of mines
sowed in the Karabakh conflict that ended in 1994, many of them are
inaccessible.

"I have a pear orchard of seven thousand square metres on the border,"
said local farmer Vachagan Simonian. "Every year this orchard could
bring in a crop of around seven thousand tonnes and I could sell it
for around two thousand dollars – but I can’t."

"People cannot till their land, they have no income, which is why
they have to leave to work in Russia," said Aharon Asilbekian, deputy

head of the village administration.

During the hostilities, the lands and mountains between Aygehovit and

an Azerbaijani village on the other side of the border were repeatedly
mined. There are still mines on around 450 hectares of land, roughly
half of the village’s plots and gardens.

Mined areas are to be found in five of Armenia’s ten regions bordering
Azerbaijan. As a result, large tracts of otherwise fertile farming
land are lying idle. Seven people have been blown up after accidentally
triggering mines since 1994, four of whom died.

"It happened seven years ago," Tornik Eganian told IWPR. "I was herding
cows near the border. I knew the place well, as I’d been there many
times before. I had never suspected that there could be landmines
there. Then, all of a sudden there was an explosion, throwing me two
or three metres back. And then I saw that one of my legs was missing."

Nowadays Eganian works as a watchman for a salary of 3.50 dollars a
month and receives just three more dollars in disability benefit.

Twice a year he goes to Yerevan to get a new artificial limb and
special shoes, free of charge.

"No one takes care of a person, who’s been disabled as a result of
a landmine explosion, except for his family," said Jemma Hasratian,
coordinator of Armenia’s national committee for the prohibition
of antipersonnel mines. "The state has no programme to support the
victims, to give them jobs and higher benefits."

"Now there’s a sign on the territory, where I lost my leg, warning
villagers against going there," said Tornik. "If there is a peace
settlement, it will be very difficult to work on the territories
of our village. The entire place is covered in landmines. It’s very
dangerous."

Asilbekian said life was hard for the villagers, because they could
not use the lands – but accepted that it was virtually impossible to
have the area de-mined.

"We understand that so long as there’s a threat of war, we cannot
have the landmines removed," he said.

"We’ve avoided disturbing the mined territories for military purposes,
but there are also mined areas that lie far from the borders," Colonel
Araik Movsesian, head of the humanitarian mine-clearing centre, told
IWPR. "We are going to clear these territories of landmines gradually."

During the Karabakh conflict, a number of villages in the border
regions changed hands several times, alternately coming under control
of the Armenian and Azerbaijani sides. Between 1991 and 1994, the
areas were mined first by volunteer units and later soldiers from both
sides, who rarely drew maps with the coordinates of the explosives,
which makes things much harder for local people.

"Very often landmines were planted by people, who were not specialists,
which makes it difficult to establish where exactly the landmines
are and how far they are from one other," said Armen Grigorian,
coordinator of the humanitarian mine-clearing programme. "The defence

ministry provided us with maps, but that wasn’t enough."

A study carried out as part of the programme in 2005 revealed that
there are around 300,000 square metres of mined territories in Armenia,
which is nearly one per cent of the entire country. "This is quite
a lot for such a small mountainous country as Armenia, especially if we

consider that landmines are most often planted on roads, including
those leading to water sources, and bridges," said Grigorian.

Grigorian’s centre, which is supported by the United Nations
Development Programme, UNDP, is working on a new strategic programme
of action for the period up until 2010.

"We intend to clear all the territories of no military significance,
that is 127,000 square metres," he went on. "To do this, we need big
financial investments – around 38 million dollars."

An estimated 69,000 residents in 60 villages in Armenia are afflicted

by the problem.

"This year, we have cleared almost entirely the territory of the
village Shurnukh in the Syunik region [in southern Armenia]," said
Movsisian. "Before they withdrew from the village, the Azerbaijanis
randomly mined arable lands, gardens and some of the forests. We
got the job fully done in the village and cleared 215,000 square
metres. Locals can now cultivate their land without fear."

The village had suffered from mine explosions every year.

In the summer of 2000, Andranik Harutyunian found a round object in a

field and pulled on the ring attached to it. The explosion left the
boy an invalid. He still has a mine splinter stuck in his thigh. His
family’s monthly income is no more than 60 dollars, and they can
barely afford visits to doctors in Yerevan, 280 kilometres away.

Since 1994, Armenia has recorded 398 cases of people blown up by
mines. In about a third of them, people were killed, with 16 deaths
recorded in the last two years.

"The number of victims has been going down with time, as people
know where there may be landmines, though accidents are not totally
avoidable," said Grigorian.

Signs saying "Danger! Landmines!" have been put up in almost all
dangerous areas, but in some places they have been taken down.

"Villagers simply take down metal objects and use them for spades or
axes," he said. "And it’s impossible to stop them doing this."

"If a cow strays into a mine-laden field, the herder will follow it,
thinking [mistakenly] that once the animal has not been blown up,
he will be safe too," said Jemma Asratian.

"There’s a lot of work to do," Colonel Movsisian told IWPR. "With
efforts continuing at this rate, it will take ninety more years to
destroy all landmines. We need more money to speed up the work."

Grigorian agrees, "If we continue at this rate, we will need a thousand
years to clear the whole of Armenia of landmines."

Gegham Vardanian is a correspondent with Internews Armenia in Yerevan.

Readers Can Pick Their Favorites For Minnesota Book Awards

READERS CAN PICK THEIR FAVORITES FOR MINNESOTA BOOK AWARDS
by Chris Roberts, Minnesota Public Radio

Minnesota Public Radio, MN
March 1 2007

St. Paul, Minn. – The Minnesota Book Awards is inviting readers to vote
for their favorite Minnesota book of 2006. Beginning Thursday, readers
may endorse one of 28 books that are up for awards in seven categories.

The book with the most votes wins the Readers’ Choice Award, which
will be presented at the annual Minnesota Book Awards Gala on May 5
in St. Paul.

Awards Co-Chair Stu Wilson says the Readers’ Choice Award was added
this year to generate more interest in Minnesota literature.

"We’re hoping to get people actively involved across the state in
looking at these great books and thought it would be a great way to
kind of go with ‘Peoples Choice’ ‘American Idol’, have people look
at the books and vote for their favorite."

Wilson says over the next six weeks, people will be able to choose
from 28 finalists on subjects ranging from cake baking to the Armenian
genocide.

"It’s a pretty daunting list of 28. I don’t know if anyone can get
through all 28 in the six weeks that the voting is open, but I think
if they can engage some of them and really find spectacular works
that are really their favorites, we’d really like them to take a
minute and vote for them," says Wilson.

Wilson says libraries and booksellers statewide will be promoting
the Readers’ Choice Award.

A list of Minnesota Book Award finalists and instructions on how to
vote are available at

www.twincities.com.

EU Envoy For South Caucasus To Arrive In Armenia March 2

EU ENVOY FOR SOUTH CAUCASUS TO ARRIVE IN ARMENIA MARCH 2

PanARMENIAN.Net
28.02.2007 16:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ EU Envoy for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby is
arriving in Armenia March 2, a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter came to know
from his office.

The agenda doesn’t include a visit to Nagorno Karabakh. When in
Azerbaijan in February Mr Semneby said he intends to pay a call to
Karabakh, however "the terms are not exacted yet."

ANKARA: Telegraph: Why Are We So Afraid Of Turkey?

TELEGRAPH: WHY ARE WE SO AFRAID OF TURKEY?

The New Anatolian, Turkey
via ABHAber, Belgium
Feb 27 2007

The anxieties of the West about Islam must not jeopardize the
reconciliation between East and West, argued Boris Johnson, a Daily
Telegraph columnist, in his article.

"If we get it right with Turkey, we could rebuild the whole ancient
harmonious union around the Mediterranean" and "heal the rupture
created by the Muslim invasions," Boris Johnson argued in an extract
from his book "The Dream of Rome."

"What would be better for the long-term health of the planet — a
Turkey increasingly apathetic about Europe, and interested in forging
links with Iran? Or one firmly entrenched in the European Union,
reaching out to provide a stabilizing influence in what will remain,
in our lifetimes, the most dangerous region of the world? I know what
I want," Boris, himself of Turkish origin, wrote.

After presenting a historical background of the relationships between
Turkey and the Western world, especially the Roman Empire, he argues
that after the conquest of Istanbul by the Ottoman Empire, Turkey
joins Egypt and North Africa and the huge tracts of the former Empire
which our Popes and prelates and politicians think are not culturally
congruent with modern, western Europe – because they fell to Islam.

"The French object to the Turks because of the Armenian massacres, as
though France were guiltless herself. Brussels occasionally launches
another of its sermons about gender equality, though it should be
remembered that Turkey gave women the vote before Belgium," Johnson
states, evaluating the issues that constitute the basic problems
regarding Turkey’s relations with the West.

Stating that the in Turkish record on human rights is one of the
most important reasons for keeping the Turks on the tram-tracks to
EU membership, Johnson asserts that the Greek human rights record
when she was admitted to the EEC was also very far from perfect.

"We need reconciliation, not repulsion. We need reciprocity, not
rejection. Instead of intensifying the differences, by burbling on
about alien "values," we should see that we are coming to a critical
moment in our discussions with Turkey," wrote Johnson, stating that
a different way of understanding is necessary for the development of
the relations.

Johnson argued that the West and Turkey could rebuild the whole
ancient harmonious union around the Mediterranean, the rich and free
dissemination of produce described by Henri Pirenne, from the Straits
of Gibraltar to the Bosphorus; from Tunis to Lyons, if the West gets
it right with Turkey.

Johnson also suggested that the EU needs to develop a new and deeper
relationship with the Maghreb countries of North Africa, based on
the old Roman idea of tolerance over time.

International Free-Style Wrestling Competition "Zoravar Andranik" Fi

INTERNATIONAL FREE-STYLE WRESTLING COMPETITION "ZORAVAR ANDRANIK" FINISHES IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
Feb 26 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, NOYAN TAPAN. The traditional international
free-style wrestling competition "Zoravar Andranik" finished at
Yerevan’s "Ashkhatank" gym-hall on February 25. 137 young wrestlers
from Armenia and 4 from Georgia (14-16 years age group) took part in
the competition, most of them being sportsmen of 46, 58, 63 and 73 kg
weight categories. 8 Armenian wrestlers and two Georgian ones were
announced the winners. One Georgian wrestler took 3rd place. This
competition was a preparatory stage for Armenian wrestlers who will
participate in the youth championship of Armenia to start on April 3.

Hayko To Represent Armenia In Eurovision 2007

HAYKO TO REPRESENT ARMENIA IN EUROVISION 2007

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.02.2007 13:52 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the Armenian national final it was decided that
Hayko will represent the country in the 2007 Eurovision Song Contest
with the song Anytime you need. Both the televoters and the jury wanted
the singer to be the second Armenian representative in the contest,
reports. Hayko is a popular singer in Armenia. He
has not only won several music festivals but he was also awarded
‘best singer’ in 2003 and 2006.

In 2006 contest first-timer Andre representing Armenia with a song
Without your love was the 8th, thus paving the way for Hayko directly
to the 2007 final to take place in Helsinki May 12.

www.eurovision.am

BAKU: "Echo": To Stop Air Flights To Armenia And To Evict 70,000 Cit

"ECHO": TO STOP AIR FLIGHTS TO ARMENIA AND TO EVICT 70,000 CITIZENS OF ARMENIA

20.02.2007

Deputy of Great National Assembly of Turkey, Shukru Elekdar, made
such proposal

To stop air flights between Turkey and Armenia, to stop "indirect
trade" and to evict 70,000 illegal Armenians from Turkey – Shukru
Elekdar, deputy of Turkish parliament from Popular Republican party,
former Ambassador of Turkey to USA and former head of executive
administration of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Turkey, called on.

Deputy called to take these response measures in return to ongoing
attempts to push through US Congress resolution on recognition of
"genocide of Armenians". Former diplomat underlined that Turkish
government and Ministry of Foreign Affairs made a mistake in this
respect. "It was pointed out before that Armenian diaspora in USA is
strong enough and stands behind all decisions. But now there is no
such tendency. After gaining independence by Armenia, foreign policy
and administration of activity of diaspora is governed by Yerevan.

Director and corrector of this work is Ambassador of Armenia in
Washington. For this reason our policy with regards to Armenia should
be reviewed. No Turk will accept game of Turkey and Armenia. Under
the pressure of USA and European Union we changed policy towards
Armenia. After occupation of Azerbaijani territories, Turkey imposed
embargo against Armenia. It strongly pressed the country, but USA and
European Union forced Turkey to soften embargo. And what do we have
now? 6 planes land in Istanbul airport every week from Armenian,
which damages image of Turkey. Armenians coming to Istanbul exist
from account of "shuttle trade" – they need it so much. Foodstuffs of
Turkey are exported to Armenia via Iran and Georgia. 70,000 Armenians
live in Turkey illegally.

Turkey should make necessary pressure upon Armenia – in order to
prevent taking decision on recognition of "genocide of Armenians"
first of all air flights and indirect export to Armenia should be
stopped, and 70,000 Armenian citizens should be evicted. Armenia
should be notices that it is time to be wise.

Armenia should understand that if it continues anti-Turkish policy
it will cost dear for it".

http://www.eco-az.com

An Eastern Mediterranean Oil War?

An Eastern Mediterranean
Oil War?
By Colonel David Eshel

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s overnight visit to Turkey has focused
attention to the strategic dialogue between the two democratic nations
in the Eastern Mediterranean. Turkey is a powerful, pro-Western, not
Arab but definitely Muslim country and Israelis had hoped for years
that its expanding relations would break the impression that the
Muslim world opposed the Jewish state.

The Turks were initially cautious, but came round about a decade ago
when they reassessed their policies. They felt that dangerous
neighbors and hotspots of instability were across their borders, and
believed that Israel’s influence in the United States could help
especially in countering Greek and Armenian lobbies in Washington.
The Turkish army’s Deputy Chief of Staff Gen. Ergin Saygun was in
Israel late last year discussing plans and more such visits are
expected following Olmert’s visit. But there seems to be much more at
stake than mere diplomatic photo opportunity exchanges between Turkey
and Israel.

Virtually unnoticed, the inauguration of the Ceyhan-Tiblisi-Baku (BTC)
oil pipeline, which links the Caspian Sea to the Eastern Mediterranean
took place on the 13th July 2006, at the very outset of the Second
Lebanon War. The official reception took place in Istanbul, hosted by
Turkey’s President Ahmet Necdet Sezer in the ýraðan Palace. Many
dignitaries among them, British Petroleum’s CEO Lord Brown and BP
leading the BTC pipeline consortium of western oil companies and
senior government officials, top oil ministers and leaders of western
oil companies, from Britain, the US, Israel and Turkey were all
present at the ceremony.

The 1,770 km Baku Tbilisi Ceyhan pipeline, simply known by the acronym
BTC, is one of the world’s longest and cost US$4 billion to build. It
snakes its way from the Sangachal oil and gas terminal south of the
Azeri capital of Baku on the Caspian Sea through neighboring Georgia
and some of the most mountainous regions of the Caucasus to finally
reach the Turkish port of Ceyhan on the Mediterranean.

The BTC pipeline totally bypasses the territory of the Russian
Federation.

as it transits through the former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and
Georgia, both of which have become US `protectorates’, firmly
integrated into a military alliance with the US and NATO. Moreover,
both Azerbaijan and Georgia have longstanding military cooperation
with Israel. Israel has a stake in the Azeri oil fields, from which it
imports some 20% of its oil.

In April 2006, Israel and Turkey announced plans for four underwater
pipelines, transporting water, electricity, natural gas and oil to
Israel, by-passing Syrian and Lebanese territory. The pipeline is
aimed bringing water to Israel, by pumping water from upstream
resources of the Tigris and Euphrates river system in Anatoli has been
a long-run strategic objective of Israel to the detriment of Syria and
Iraq.

In its context, the BTC pipeline dominated by British Petroleum and
American interest, has dramatically changed the geopolitics of the
Eastern Mediterranean, which is now linked , through an energy
corridor, to the strategic Caspian sea basin. But there is more at
stage here.

The geographical fact is that Ceyhan and the Mediterranean port of
Ashkelon are situated only 400 km apart. Oil can be transported to
that port in tankers or through a specially constructed under-water
pipeline. From Ashkelon the oil can be pumped through already existing
pipeline to the port of Eilat at the Red Sea, which had been very
active during betters days between the Shah’s Iran and Israel during
the Sixties. From Eilat oil it can be transported to India and Far
Eastern countries in tankers, thus outflanking the vulnerable Hurmoz
straits.

Last May, the Jerusalem Post published an article that Turkey and
Israel are negotiating the construction of a multi-million-dollar
energy and water project that will transport water, electricity,
natural gas and oil by pipelines to Israel, with the oil to be sent
onward from Israel to the Far East.

Antalya Mayor Menderes Turel mentioned this in a press conference. The
project, which would likely receive foreign economic backing, is
currently undergoing a feasibility study sponsored by the
Luxembourg-based European Investment Bank.

The United States’ ultimate strategic design is intended primarily to
weaken Russia’s role in Central Asia and the Eastern Mediterranean,
whileisolating Iran from this important energy source.

Iran being not only a major oil producing country is also a direct
stepping stone between the Caspian region and the Persian Gulf. As
such, it would certainly like to see Caspian oil flowing through its
territory rather than through Turkey. Moreover, having full control
over the Persian Gulf shipping lanes, through its military control on
the strategic Hormuz strait, Iran could virtually strangle, at will,
all international oil supplies, if political pressure on its nuclear
program intensifies.

Iran’s claim to Caspian oil dates back to the last century when the
Russian Empire and Persia, later Iran signed agreements in 1921 and
1940 recognizing the Caspian Sea as a lake belonging to and divided
between them. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Iran
wanted this agreement to continue despite assertions of independence
by the breakaway states of Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan.

Five years ago, the official Iranian news agency IRNA quoted a
statement of the Iranian Oil Ministry as saying that it protests
prospecting by foreign companies in Iran’s claimed 20 percent sector
of the Caspian Sea. The warning came a day after Iran summoned
Azerbaijan’s charge d’affaires in Tehran to protest plans by the
state-run oil company of Azerbaijan, Socar, to carry out oil
exploration studies with foreign companies at the Alborz oil field "in
Iran’s sector of the Caspian Sea." Iran even threatened with military
action if its warnings would remain unheeded and indeed, on July 23,
2001 in blatant violation of international law, an Iranian warship and
two fighter jets forced a research vessel working on behalf of British
Petroleum (BP)-Amoco in the Araz-Alov-Sharg field out of that sector.

In fact, the BTC pipeline is far from secure by itself. Western
intelligence reports indicate that Iran republican guards (IRGC) are
carefully expanding support for subversive elements in Armenia, a
country which is still technically at war with Azerbaijan. It is well
known, that in the Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh the conflict
between Armenian and Azeris is still going on.

Armenian nationalists might decide to attack the BTC in order to hurt
Azerbaijan, which derives most of its income from oil sales. The
pipeline route passes through or near seven different war-zones. Its
route passes just 10 miles from Nagorno-Karabakh, the area of
Azerbaijan occupied by Armenia, where a bloody conflict killed at
least 25,000 people It passes through Georgia, which remains unstable,
with separatist movements in Abkhazia and South Ossetia – movements
which the Georgian government tried to violently suppress during the
1990s. Just across the border into Russia, and still only 70 miles
from the BTC pipeline route, the horrific conflict in Chechnya
continues. The region also saw related conflict in neighboring
Dagestan in 1999, and fighting between the Russian republics of North
Ossetia and Ingushetia in 1992. In Turkey, the BTC route passes
through the edge of the area of the conflict between the Turkish state
and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), now known as Kongra-Gel. And
Russia, by all means, is unlikely to view this new American strategic
move without adequate response.

Moscow defense ministry sources pointed out recently, that the planned
Russian naval base in _Tartus_
( 206/analysis/analysis-231206.htm)
will enable Russia to solidify its positions in the Middle East under
the pretext to ensure security of Syria. Moscow intends to deploy an
air defense system around the base – to provide air cover for the base
itself and a substantial part of Syrian territory. It could also
conduct underwater activities to sabotage submerged pipelines, or at
least threaten to do so, if its demand will not be adhered to. A
dangerous situation could emerge, if Israeli and Russian activities in
the Eastern mediterranean could clash with each other on matters of
highly strategic interests.

Read David Eshel’s past commentary
( /1206/analysis/analysis-171206.htm)

Copyright 2007, Defense Update

http://www.defense-update.com/newscast/1
http://www.defense-update.com/newscast

That’s unheard of!

C&G Newspapers, MI
Feb 22 2007

That’s unheard of!

Hosted by radio legend Judy Adams, Jazz Café Discovery Series puts
new music first

By K. Michelle Moran
Arts & Entertainment Editor

For years, she introduced WDET-FM listeners to new music, so when
Detroit’s Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts launched a
concert series featuring emerging local jazz players, Judy Adams was
a fitting choice for host.

The award-winning former program director and on-air personality, who
worked for Detroit’s public radio station from 1974-2005, began
hosting the weekly Jazz Café Discovery Series in January at Music
Hall. From 7-11 p.m. each Tuesday and Wednesday, visitors can drop in
for free and catch roughly four acts per night in the gorgeous,
intimate setting of a restored art deco room in Music Hall. Between
bands, Adams spins recorded jazz.

`It’s one of the best jazz rooms in the city of Detroit – in the
country, really,’ said Adams, who lives in Grosse Pointe Woods with
her husband and son.

Besides playing for a live audience, bands will receive a CD of their
performance, and the concerts are broadcast weekly on WVMV-FM, 98.7,
at 11 p.m. Sundays during a show hosted by Adams, who also has a show
on the Windsor station CJAM-FM. The series’ best artists also vie for
a chance to play a paid concert during the 2007 Detroit International
Jazz Festival over Labor Day weekend.

`The Jazz Café Discovery series is an educational program designed to
`discover’ and highlight metro Detroit’s future jazz stars,’ said
Music Hall President and Artistic Director Vince Paul in a prepared
statement. `We look forward to providing a stage for these
up-and-coming talented performers.’

So far, the series has attracted many student musicians, including
some from West Bloomfield High School, Grosse Pointe South High
School, the International Academy in Bloomfield Hills and Wayne State
University. Adams said more schools offer jazz programs now, and more
kids are getting into the music at a young age.

`Young people are drawn to jazz because young people are a lot more
aware of music these days,’ she said. `[Jazz] has so much substance
to it … and a lot of these kids have parents who were into jazz.’

Adams hails from a musical family. She grew up on Detroit’s east side
and in St. Clair Shores, and remembers living in a two-family flat
with her grandparents, who had a piano. Her father often played
classical and jazz around the house, and ethnic music – her parents
were of Armenian descent – figured prominently as well.

`I always had a strong ethnic identity, and I was always interested
in [different] nationalities and cultures,’ Adams said.

She began experimenting on the piano at 4, and by 7, she was taking
formal lessons. At Wayne State and Oakland universities, she studied
piano, harpsichord, composition and ethno-musicology.

Adams wasn’t immune to the allure of rock `n’ roll, though.

`When the Beatles came out, I was in my teens then, and a whole
different world opened up,’ she said. `I saw how different these
musics were – and how similar.’

With her eclectic personal tastes and keen ear, Adams is enjoying her
new gig at Music Hall, and listeners are enjoying her return.

The Jazz Café Discovery Series runs through Aug. 29. At press time,
Music Hall officials were still seeking bands to perform, and anyone
can request consideration for an audition, regardless of experience.

`We’re trying to draw out as much music as we can,’ Adams said. `We’d
rather be inclusive than exclusive. And all forms of jazz are
welcome.’

Interested artists can contact Ted Nagy at [email protected],
(313) 887-8503 or c/o Jazz Café at Music Hall, 350 Madison Ave.,
Detroit, MI 48226. For more information, visit

age-Articles/2007/02-21-07/AE-ADAMSDISCOVERY.asp

http://www.candgnews.com/Homep
www.musichall.org.

Suspected killer of Turkish-Armenian journalist hospitalised

Agence France Presse — English
February 22, 2007 Thursday 8:20 AM GMT

Suspected killer of Turkish-Armenian journalist hospitalised

The suspected murderer of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was
hospitalised overnight and underwent surgery for appendicitis,
doctors said Thursday.

Ogun Samast was taken to hospital under heavy security measures, the
agency said.

Samast, 17, is in good shape after the operation in a state hospital
in the northwestern city of Izmit and is expected to be discharged at
the weekend, chief physician Senol Erguney told Anatolia news agency.

The suspect, who has confessed to shooting Dink outside the Istanbul
office of his bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos on January 19,
had been incarcerated in a maximum security prison in the nearby town
of Kandira, about 100 kilometres (62 miles) east of Istanbul.

Seven other people have been jailed for involvement in the murder,
believed to have been committed with ultra-nationalist motives.

The 52-year-old Dink, a leading member of Turkey’s tiny Armenian
community, called the mass killings of Armenians under the Ottoman
Empire genocide, a label that Ankara’s official line on the massacres
fiercely rejects.