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Turkish artist stabbed in Istanbul

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  • Turkish artist stabbed in Istanbul

    I see Armenia- Turkey rapprochement is going well

    Turkish artist defending statue stabbed in Istanbul



    ANKARA, TURKEY—A Turkish artist and his assistant were stabbed in Istanbul on Monday as they emerged from a meeting planning a protest aimed at saving a controversial monument.

    The giant statue, which promotes friendship between the traditional enemies Turkey and Armenia, has been criticized in Turkey because it overshadows an Islamic shrine near the border of the two nations. During a visit to the site in January, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan called it a “freak,” prompting moves by local officials to have it removed.

    On Monday, television footage showed injured artist and government critic Bedri Baykam walking around frantically and pleading for help before a woman hailed a taxi that took him to a hospital. His assistant, Tugba Kurtulus, was seen lying on the ground at a car park, surrounded by people trying to help her.

    The unidentified knife-wielding attacker escaped but later surrendered to the police, saying he carried out the attack because Baykam insulted him, the police said. The details of the incident were not clear.

    The artist was stabbed in the abdomen and underwent a four-hour surgery to repair damage to his intestines and liver and now he was in intensive care, said Dr. Caglar Cuhadaroglu of Acibadem Maslak hospital.

    His assistant was stabbed in the groin, HaberTurk channel said.

    Police were investigating whether the attack was linked to the controversy surrounding the monument.

    Artists such as Baykam are planning a protest march Saturday in defence of the unfinished monument, which features a divided human figure, with one half extending a hand to the other half.

    Hurriyet newspaper’s website quoted Baykam as telling the meeting earlier: “We are here to prevent something like a murder. ... We are here to prevent an artistic massacre.”

    News reports said authorities this week put up scaffolding around the 35-meter monument to take it apart piece by piece.

    http://www.thestar.com/news/world/ar...ed-in-istanbul
    Last edited by KanadaHye; 04-21-2011, 07:14 AM.
    "Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it." ~Malcolm X

  • #2
    Re: Turkish artist stabbed in Istanbul

    Another view.

    Click image for larger version

Name:	Kars monument.jpg
Views:	1
Size:	95.0 KB
ID:	538714
    Plenipotentiary meow!

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    • #3
      Re: Turkish artist stabbed in Istanbul

      I read somewhere that Armenian newspapers in Bolis did not extensively cover his stabbing. Nobody deserves to be stabbed, but this Turkish artist is apparently a well-known nationalist who only cares about campaigning against the current Islamist government...

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Turkish artist stabbed in Istanbul

        FRENCH-ARMENIAN CITIZEN DETAINED IN DIYARBAKIR, TURKEY

        epress.am
        10.05.2011 17:12

        A French citizen of Armenian descent was taken under police custody
        during the Mesopotamia Social Forum which took place from Sept. 21-25
        in the southeastern Turkish city of Diyarbakir. News of his being
        detained was disseminated only today, when Tigran Yegavian returned to
        France and contacted the French Consulate in Istanbul to investigate
        the issue.

        Ahead of the forum, police stopped and searched Yegavian, along
        with others. After they found phone numbers of MPs of Turkey's
        main Kurdish party, the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP), in his
        possession, police called him in to be questioned about his meetings
        with members of Turkey's Kurdish community, because they, according
        to police officials, are tied to "the acts of terrorism supported by
        the European community."

        Yegavian, according to the Epress.am correspondent in Istanbul, is
        a member of a very important Armenian foundation in France. He had
        travelled to Turkey to conduct studies on Armenians and had meetings
        with some public figures in order to write articles, as well as to
        support dialogue among Armenian, Turkish and Kurdish peoples.

        Note, on Sept. 20 members of the French branch of Yerkir Union (Yerkir
        Europe) met with Diyarbakir mayor Osman Baydemir of Kurdish descent
        to discuss possible joint intercultural programs between the civil
        societies of Armenia, Turkey and the Armenian diaspora, which, most
        likely, was the reason Turkish authorities called forum participants
        in for questioning.

        Updated on 6 pm, same day: "Two French-Armenian citizens" changed to
        one French-Armenian citizen and his name, Tigran Yegavian, added.
        Hayastan or Bust.

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