Announcement

Collapse

Forum Rules (Everyone Must Read!!!)

1] What you CAN NOT post.

You agree, through your use of this service, that you will not use this forum to post any material which is:
- abusive
- vulgar
- hateful
- harassing
- personal attacks
- obscene

You also may not:
- post images that are too large (max is 500*500px)
- post any copyrighted material unless the copyright is owned by you or cited properly.
- post in UPPER CASE, which is considered yelling
- post messages which insult the Armenians, Armenian culture, traditions, etc
- post racist or other intentionally insensitive material that insults or attacks another culture (including Turks)

The Ankap thread is excluded from the strict rules because that place is more relaxed and you can vent and engage in light insults and humor. Notice it's not a blank ticket, but just a place to vent. If you go into the Ankap thread, you enter at your own risk of being clowned on.
What you PROBABLY SHOULD NOT post...
Do not post information that you will regret putting out in public. This site comes up on Google, is cached, and all of that, so be aware of that as you post. Do not ask the staff to go through and delete things that you regret making available on the web for all to see because we will not do it. Think before you post!


2] Use descriptive subject lines & research your post. This means use the SEARCH.

This reduces the chances of double-posting and it also makes it easier for people to see what they do/don't want to read. Using the search function will identify existing threads on the topic so we do not have multiple threads on the same topic.

3] Keep the focus.

Each forum has a focus on a certain topic. Questions outside the scope of a certain forum will either be moved to the appropriate forum, closed, or simply be deleted. Please post your topic in the most appropriate forum. Users that keep doing this will be warned, then banned.

4] Behave as you would in a public location.

This forum is no different than a public place. Behave yourself and act like a decent human being (i.e. be respectful). If you're unable to do so, you're not welcome here and will be made to leave.

5] Respect the authority of moderators/admins.

Public discussions of moderator/admin actions are not allowed on the forum. It is also prohibited to protest moderator actions in titles, avatars, and signatures. If you don't like something that a moderator did, PM or email the moderator and try your best to resolve the problem or difference in private.

6] Promotion of sites or products is not permitted.

Advertisements are not allowed in this venue. No blatant advertising or solicitations of or for business is prohibited.
This includes, but not limited to, personal resumes and links to products or
services with which the poster is affiliated, whether or not a fee is charged
for the product or service. Spamming, in which a user posts the same message repeatedly, is also prohibited.

7] We retain the right to remove any posts and/or Members for any reason, without prior notice.


- PLEASE READ -

Members are welcome to read posts and though we encourage your active participation in the forum, it is not required. If you do participate by posting, however, we expect that on the whole you contribute something to the forum. This means that the bulk of your posts should not be in "fun" threads (e.g. Ankap, Keep & Kill, This or That, etc.). Further, while occasionally it is appropriate to simply voice your agreement or approval, not all of your posts should be of this variety: "LOL Member213!" "I agree."
If it is evident that a member is simply posting for the sake of posting, they will be removed.


8] These Rules & Guidelines may be amended at any time. (last update September 17, 2009)

If you believe an individual is repeatedly breaking the rules, please report to admin/moderator.
See more
See less

The Assassination of Hrant Dink

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • I would like to condemn the assassination of Hrant Dink.

    It was pointless and achieved nothing, it just furthers the ultra nationalists causes. Which is something I know most Turks and definitely all Armenian's don't want.

    Comment


    • Hi to all of you,

      I thank it is very sad this happend to such a good men which intentions were only to make things better between the Turks and the Armenians. My father spoke with him a couple of times in our Armenian family church in istanbul (Uc horos - beyoglu). He did not know him that much but it was a schock to all of us including turkish people as well.

      Comment


      • Yes, I have been reading a bit about Mr. Dink and his life and knowing him more only makes me even more upset that he died...He was a hope to both the Turks and the Armenians alike I think...As he has said, he may not be Turkish but he came from that land...He called himself "Turkiyeli"...I was researching couple of days ago.

        Comment


        • ANDREW FINKEL [email protected] Columnists
          Imagine…

          Is Turkey about to get its second Nobel Prize winner? There was a very earnest recommendation made at a formal evening I attended in London this week hosted at the headquarters of Amnesty International UK but sponsored by many of the country’s other human rights organizations, including Index on Censorship, Open Democracy and English Pen. “A Turkish patriot” is how one speaker described the hoped for recipient. “A Martin Luther King,” said another. “A symbol that there is a way out of the current impasse,” said a third. The award would have to be made posthumously since Hrant Dink is dead.
          The gathering I attended was a tribute to the murdered journalist at the end of what is, by Armenian custom, a period of mourning. That same custom holds that the soul of the deceased lingers for 40 days on earth and that it is incumbent on friends and family to wish it Godspeed as it finally departs. Of course Hrant Dink was a determined iconoclast, and I have a feeling that his spirit will hover far longer than the statutory 40 days.
          Interesting about Wednesday night’s tribute was not just how many people managed to brave a blustery wet London night to attend (there were similar events in Istanbul and cities throughout the world) but the spirit in which it was conducted. I had been warned by a colleague that there was a feud going on over who “owned” Hrant Dink’s memory -- the assumption being that there would be an effort to appropriate the grief and outrage over his death to push for different political agenda including that of genocide recognition. However, there was no unseemly squabbling over his memory. Ronald Suny, an extraordinarily well-respected American political scientist of Armenian ancestry, made a point of stressing how Hrant’s greatest ambition was to see Turkey as a modern, fully democratic country and how this had often brought him into conflict with those in the diaspora motivated by the need if not for revenge then at least satisfaction.
          The mood of the evening was that if Hrant Dink’s life symbolized anything, it was that there had to be a reconciliation between Turk and Armenian other than through silence and between Turkey and Armenia.
          This is how I interpreted, at any rate, the tens of thousands who marched in his funeral cortege saying that “we are Armenians,” “we are all Hrants.” This is not everyone’s stated view. I read recently of an accusation (Feb. 26) by the head of the Turkish Historical Society, Yusuf Halaço?lu that large segments of the crowds were organized subversives. They would not succeed in their aims, he said, because the march had the reverse effect of what they intended. Public opinion has hardened against them and “it is impossible to make anyone accept the genocide.”
          It is odd in the extreme that a gathering organized by civil libertarians in London avoided turning Hrant Dink’s death into a parody of the genocide issue where the head of an august body like the Turkish Historical Society failed. I am shocked that a man of Professor Halaço?lu’s education could be so insensitive. No doubt in the unlikelihood of Hrant Dink being given a Nobel Peace Prize, this too would be interpreted as an attempt by Scandinavian subversives to divide Turkey.
          My own reading of these remarks, of those of some editors-in-chief of newspapers, of some hard-line nationalist politicians and even ministers, is that they are afraid. Just as others fear a wave of ultranationalism in Turkey, others fear that some people in society have slipped under the ropes used to corral them in. They fear they might lose the power of control.
          I don’t want to exaggerate. What happened in 1915 is still a highly emotive issue in Turkey. But just for a moment, imagine a world in which Turkey, upon being told that the US Congress (or the Icelandic Althingi or the Japanese Diet), was thinking about recognizing a genocide did not 1) spend millions on expensive lobbyists; 2) boycott McDonald’s except on grounds other than health; 3) otherwise threaten to hold its breath until turning blue. Instead as a nation Turkey would shrug its shoulders, raise its eyebrows in exasperated fashion and say ,”Oh yes, once upon a time we used to think it was important to have an official history, to tell people what to think, but that was before we decided it was much less trouble to let them do so for themselves.”
          04.03.2007
          General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

          Comment


          • Although this is not getting much play in Western reports...
            The killers of Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink belonged to the "Center of Islamic Order," a radical Islamic group.
            According to Milliyet newspaper, 17-year-old Ogün Samast, arrested yesterday over suspicion of Dink's killing, received the gun from Hayal. At that both were members of the "Center of Islamic Order" ultra-right organization. The edition reminds that after the arrest in Trabzon Hayal shouted out in the court, "I did it to punish Americans. I'll get free in three years and will blow up HSBC Bank and the Russian Consulate."
            International Herald Tribune says Yasin Hayal was trained to make bombs at a camp of Chechen militants in Azerbaijan.
            One of the suspects, Yasin Hayal, an alleged Islamic militant who learned to make bombs from Chechen militants at a camp in Azerbaijan and who served 11 months in jail for the bombing of a McDonalds restaurant in Trabzon in 2004, is suspected of masterminding the attacks on both Dink and Father Santaro.
            Like Hrant Dink, Father Santaro was shot in the back twice by his assailant, a young Muslim boy who shouted "Allah Akbar" (God is great) as he murdered the kneeling priest.

            Comment


            • US Congressional Resolution on Hrant Dink

              The Senate Resolution introduced by Senator Joseph Biden, the Chairman of
              Senate Foreign Relations Committee, on February 1, 2007:

              Condemning the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist and human rights
              advocate Hrant Dink and urging the people of Turkey to honor his legacy of
              tolerance.
              Whereas Hrant Dink was a respected, eloquent advocate for press freedom,
              human rights, and reconciliation;
              Whereas, in 1996, Mr. Dink founded the weekly bilingual newspaper Agos and,
              as the paper's editor in chief, used the paper to provide a voice for
              Turkey's Armenian community;
              Whereas Mr. Dink was a strong proponent of rapprochement between Turks and
              Armenians and worked diligently to improve relations between those
              communities;
              Whereas Mr. Dink's commitment to democratic values, nonviolence, and
              freedom in the media earned him widespread recognition and numerous
              international awards;
              Whereas Mr. Dink was prosecuted under Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code
              for speaking about the Armenian Genocide;
              Whereas, notwithstanding hundreds of threats to Mr. Dink's life and safety,
              he remained a steadfast proponent of pluralism and tolerance;
              Whereas Mr. Dink was assassinated outside the offices of Agos in Istanbul,
              Turkey, on January 19, 2007;
              Whereas tens of thousands of people in Turkey of many ethnicities protested
              Mr. Dink's killing and took to the streets throughout the country to honor
              his memory;
              Whereas the Government of Turkey has pledged to undertake a full
              investigation into the murder of Mr. Dink;
              Whereas the Prime Minister of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has stated that
              when Mr. Dink was shot, “a bullet was fired at freedom of thought and
              democratic life in Turkey”;
              Whereas the Foreign Minister of Armenia, Vartan Oskanian, stated that Mr.
              Dink “lived his life in the belief that there can be understanding,
              dialogue and peace amongst peoples”; and
              Whereas Mr. Dink's tragic death affirmed the importance of promoting the
              values that he championed in life: Now, therefore, be it
              1 Resolved, That the Senate –
              (1) condemns the murder of Hrant Dink as a shameful act of cowardice
              perpetrated with contempt for law, justice, and decency;
              (2) supports the pledge of the Government of Turkey to conduct an
              exhaustive investigation into the assassination of Mr. Dink and to
              prosecute those responsible;
              (3) urges the Government of Turkey to repeal Article 301 of the Turkish
              Penal Code and work diligently to foster a more open intellectual
              environment in the country that is conducive to the free exchange of ideas;
              (4) recognizes the decision of the Government of Turkey to invite senior
              Armenian religious and political figures to participate in memorial
              services for Mr. Dink;
              (5) calls on the Government of Turkey to act in the interest of regional
              security and prosperity and reestablish full diplomatic, political, and
              economic relations with the Government of Armenia; and
              (6) urges the people of Turkey to honor Mr. Dink's legacy of tolerance.
              General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

              Comment


              • A group of Turkish activists will initiate a political disobediences
                campaign against Article 301 of the Penal Code. 10 members of the
                `Strong
                Turkey' Party intend to gather in one of public places of Istanbul and
                repeat the statements made by editor-in-chief of the Agos daily Hrant
                Dink,
                which were characterised as `insulting' Turkishness' under Article 301.
                Later they will surrender to the Office of Public Prosecutor. Next
                week
                another 10 activists will repeat their actions. Their aim is to
                continue
                with the campaign until Article 301 is expelled.

                Comment


                • St. Vartan Cathedral hosts joint 40th-day memorial service honoring
                  slain journalist

                  by Florence Avakian

                  NEW YORK - Even with death threats and official harassment, fleeing
                  Istanbul was never an option for journalist Hrant Dink. He was a
                  committed and dedicated journalist. This was the resounding theme
                  echoed by his fellow journalists and friends during a memorial at St.
                  Vartan Armenian Cathedral in New York City, following a 40th-day
                  requiem service for the repose of his soul.

                  In his last article for Agos, the weekly newspaper he founded and
                  served as editor-in-chief, Dink wrote: "To stay and live in Turkey was
                  necessary because we truly desired it, and had to do so out of respect
                  to the thousands of friends in Turkey who struggled for democracy and
                  who supported us. We were going to stay, and we were going to resist."

                  Shortly after the article appeared, Hrant Dink was shot dead on the
                  steps of the editorial offices of Agos, on January 19, 2007. To his
                  thousands of friends in Turkey, and those around the world who
                  welcomed Dink's courageous support of the truth, his murder was a
                  devastating blow.

                  But the spirit of support that erupted in Istanbul - among Armenians
                  and Turks alike - has become a sign that, even in death, Dink's
                  message of hopeful, peaceful reconciliation remains profoundly
                  compelling.

                  An overflowing crowd of more than 800 mourners filled St. Vartan
                  Armenian Cathedral in New York City on Sunday, March 4. In a rare
                  moment of ecumenical unity, a joint memorial and requiem service
                  marking the 40th day following Dink's assassination was celebrated by
                  the Armenian Church, Armenian Catholics, and Armenian protestant
                  organizations.

                  Heading this solemn event were Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate
                  of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern); Archbishop
                  Oshagan Choloyan, Prelate of the Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian
                  Apostolic Church of America; Bishop Manuel Batakian, Exarch of the
                  Armenian Catholic Exarchate of America; and the Armenian Missionary
                  Association of America. The Reverend Canon Francis V. Tiso of the
                  United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) delivered the
                  requiem homily.

                  * Focus on forgiveness

                  In his eloquent sermon during the morning's Divine Liturgy, Archbishop
                  Barsamian, speaking in Armenian, stressed the slain journalist's
                  exemplary qualities: his extraordinary courage, devotion to the
                  Armenian cause, loyalty to his country, and his unwavering fight for
                  democracy and understanding.

                  "Hrant Dink believed in everyone's right to speak the truth, and in
                  this spirit, he wanted Turkey to own up to its past," he said.
                  "Through Agos, he aimed to change the thinking in Turkey and open a
                  new chapter in Turkish history."

                  The Primate, who represented His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme
                  Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, at Dink's funeral in
                  Istanbul, recalled the mass outpouring of grief by tens of thousands
                  of people, including thousands of Turks, who walked past the Agos
                  offices carrying flowers and signs declaring "We are all Hrant Dink."

                  "Silently, they expressed their faith in Hrant and his work. Our
                  Armenian people have seen much of this kind of anguish, but sorrow
                  must not deaden our spirit, or blind us for our future work. We must
                  continue the work and dreams of Hrant Dink, so that guns will turn
                  into flowers, and violence to blossoming gardens," the Primate said in
                  conclusion.

                  During the requiem service, the guest preacher, the Reverend Canon
                  Francis V. Tiso, focused on the need to seek and offer forgiveness.

                  Fr. Tiso, associate director for the Secretariat for Ecumenical and
                  Interreligious Affairs for the United States Conference of Catholic
                  Bishops (USCCB), recited a litany of past atrocities man has committed
                  against man before asking: "What can be done if the offender does not
                  ask for forgiveness? When a crime is centuries long and global in
                  concept, it becomes the unanswered question."

                  Comparing Hrant Dink to the widely admired Catholic monk Thomas
                  Merton, Tiso said that the Armenian journalist was an isolated soul,
                  but was also deeply aware of his role in the larger community.

                  "He did not want to provoke violence. For Hrant Dink, journalism was
                  the pursuit of truth. Reconciliation comes from a solitary person's
                  ability to see the truth," Fr. Tiso said. "That we have gathered here
                  today, 40 days after his death, is proof that Hrant Dink's assassin
                  failed. The truth can never be vanquished."

                  * Dedication to the truth

                  Following the Divine Liturgy and requiem services, more than 750
                  people filled the Haik and Alice Kavookjian Auditorium for a memorial
                  reception honoring Dink. Before a large, imposing picture of Hrant
                  Dink flanked by candles and flowers, Bishop Batakian delivered the
                  opening prayer in the presence of Dink's fellow journalists.

                  Dr. Michael O'Hurley-Pitts of the Eastern Diocese introduced several
                  speakers from the New York Times, the Overseas Press Club, and PEN
                  American Center, who addressed the crowd, highlighting Dink's
                  journalistic career and his continuous dedication to discussing the
                  truth and asking the hard questions.

                  Dr. Peter Steinfels, the "Beliefs" columnist for the New York Times
                  and co-director of Fordham University's Center on Religion and
                  Culture, spoke of "a man who published in two languages that I cannot
                  read, in a land I visited only once, and facing dangers that I have
                  never had to confront... has been added to the short list of influential
                  and heroic journalists whom I embrace as models for my own
                  journalism."

                  Pointing out that numerous journalists have been killed trying "to
                  bring the truth of world and local events to people," he stressed the
                  importance of freedom of the press and "the courage and sacrifice it
                  takes to uphold it." He also noted that truth - a word so often
                  associated with Dink's career - can serve as the basis for
                  understanding others.

                  "Truth cannot be evaded or soft-pedaled or sugarcoated, no matter
                  that it threatens to anger authorities, embarrass our friends or our
                  faith, challenge our ideology, or upset accommodations based on the
                  treacherous sands of falsehood," Steinfels said. "If truth is to
                  become a basis for dialogue and reconciliation, it requires the
                  fullest telling possible, which is no easy task."

                  To become a basis for dialogue, truth must "communicate in ways that
                  penetrate defenses and shatter stereotypes, as well as proclaim with a
                  humility open to correction and revision, which may be the most
                  difficult thing of all," Dr. Steinfels said.

                  Jeremy Main, a member of the Freedom of the Press Committee of the
                  Overseas Press Club, passionately spoke about the great courage it
                  takes for someone in Dink's situation to practice active journalism.
                  Convicted under Turkey's Article 301 for "denigrating Turkishness,"
                  Dink was still facing prosecution at the time of his death, but
                  heroically continued his work.

                  "It takes exceptional courage for journalists to practice their
                  profession. Hrant Dink had the courage and paid the price," Main said.

                  The Overseas Press Club had strongly protested the prosecution of
                  Dink several times, following the legal developments, most recently
                  lodging official protests last December and fully condemned his
                  killing this January.

                  It was important to note, Main said, that Dink didn't write merely
                  to "stir the pot"; rather he hoped to inspire discussion. "He didn't
                  raise these issues to divide people or inflame passions. But, on the
                  contrary, to cool matters and bring discussion," he said.

                  * Inspiring writer

                  Anna Kushner, coordinator of the Freedom to Write Program of the PEN
                  American Center, offered her heartfelt recollections of meeting Dink,
                  a long-time PEN member, in Istanbul last March during a conference on
                  freedom of expression. She told the mourners she was holding a
                  Christmas card Dink had sent her just weeks earlier, when she received
                  a telephone call informing her of his death.

                  Remembering her friend and colleague, she noted that he was not
                  willing to self-censor his work, even when threatened. He was
                  steadfast because he knew truthful writing could inspire an open
                  dialogue, which might lead to reconciliation between the Armenian and
                  Turkish communities.

                  "Hrant Dink spoke candidly of the challenges he faced," she said.
                  "His defiance was not an act of courage, but something he had to do.
                  He gave voice to issues people are afraid of, and don't talk about. He
                  was one of the few writers that could inspire. In his death, Hrant
                  brought people together in ways he knew they were capable of -
                  Armenians, Turks, Americans, coming together as human beings."

                  * A moving tribute

                  Dressed in black highlighted by red carnations, the 8th-grade students
                  from New Jersey's Hovnanian School presented a beautiful program of
                  poetry and dramatic readings, quoting some of the slain journalist's
                  symbolic words.

                  Their performance was accompanied by a professionally-prepared film
                  by Hovnanian School Principal Anahid Garmiryan, detailing Dink's life
                  and work, from his childhood to his death. It included a moving
                  portrait of the massive outpouring of grief that flooded Istanbul -
                  and the globe - after Dink's murder.

                  The emotional performance ended with all the children donning masks
                  of Hrant Dink's face, symbolizing the fact that "We are all Hrant
                  Dink."

                  * A lingering issue

                  Before offering his closing prayer, Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan spoke
                  passionately of Dink who, he said, was born in 1954, but died in 1915.

                  "They wanted to silence us then, but they didn't succeed. They
                  wanted to silence us when they destroyed the khatchkars in
                  Nakhichevan, but they also didn't succeed. And they wanted to silence
                  the voice of Hrant Dink, but they again have not succeeded," he said.
                  "We are the ones who must carry on their voices and their work. We
                  believe in forgiveness, but it must come from the people who died in
                  1915."

                  The sponsors of the Hrant Dink Memorial and reception included the
                  Diocesan Gomidas Choir, the Constantinople Armenian Relief Society
                  (CARS), the Tbrevank Alumni, Inc., the Armenian-American Sports
                  Educational Center-Hye Doon, and the Esayan-Getronagan Alumni, Inc.

                  During the memorial service and reception, the Knights of Vartan
                  served as ushers and handed out small photographs of Hrant Dink to all
                  attendees, who wore them over their hearts throughout the day.

                  During the requiem service, sung by the St. Vartan Cathedral choir
                  under the direction of choirmaster Khoren Mekanejian and accompanied
                  by organist Florence Avakian, the soul-stirring Kuta Der ("Have Mercy,
                  Lord") by Armenian composer Alexander Haroutunian, was performed.
                  General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

                  Comment


                  • Current news releases distributed by Cision in Canada including multimedia press releases, investor relations and disclosure, and company news.


                    Attention News Editors:

                    Turkey - Murdered journalist's family want proof of government's intention to punish all those responsible

                    MONTREAL, March 20 /CNW Telbec/ - The family of newspaper editor Hrant
                    Dink are calling for action over police incompetence in the enquiry into his
                    19 January murder in Istanbul, despite the speedy arrest of the suspected
                    gunman.
                    Reporters Without Borders today backed lawyers for the family of
                    Hrant Dink, the murdered Turkish-Armenian editor of the weekly newspaper Agos,
                    in a call to the Istanbul chief prosecutor to punish all those who failed to
                    act on information that could have prevented Dink's murder in Istanbul on
                    19 January.
                    Lawyer Fethiye Cetin said in the 15 March request that at least
                    17 messages warning of a plot to kill the journalist had been sent to Istanbul
                    police by police in Trabzon, where many of the suspects live. The lawyers also
                    demanded that all legal procedures in the case be transferred to an Istanbul
                    court.
                    Reporters Without Borders said it expected "action against police who
                    displayed disgraceful negligence in the murder of Dink and some of whom showed
                    sympathy for the suspected killer. However, the authorities have hardly been
                    convincing in their condemnation of the murder."
                    Cetin and his colleague Bahri Bayram Belen told the media that the murder
                    could not have been an isolated act only involving people in the Pelitli
                    neighbourhood of Trabzon. The numerous attacks by ultra-nationalist groups
                    since a bomb blast at a McDonald's restaurant in Trabzon in 2004 have
                    continued since Dink's death, they said, suggesting that a "terrorist group
                    threatening the democratic rule of law" was responsible.
                    Cetin demanded to know what had become of official legal action begun
                    against police in Samsun, the town where the suspected killer, Ogun Samast,
                    was arrested and where police officers had taken "souvenir" photos of
                    themselves with Samast.
                    Reporters Without Borders said the government had shown "little evidence
                    of its intention to put an end to ultra-nationalist violence" and "repeated
                    threats to journalists and intellectuals discussing the 1915 massacres of
                    Armenians and the Kurdish question."

                    Reporters Without Borders defends imprisoned journalists and press
                    freedom throughout the world. It has nine national sections (Austria, Belgium,
                    Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland). It has
                    representatives in Bangkok, London, New York, Tokyo and Washington. And it has
                    more than 120 correspondents worldwide.


                    For further information: Emily Jacquard, Canadian office representative,
                    Reporters Without Borders, (514) 521-4111, Cell: (514) 258-4208, Fax: (514)
                    521-7771, [email protected]
                    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

                    Comment


                    • Excellent!

                      HRANT IS KILLED, LET ALL LIARS SHUT-UP

                      Everyone who says that this was an attack on Turkey, everyone who talks about the sinister games played on Turkey, everyone who talks about the timing of this attack coinciding with foreign parliaments’ making decisions on the “alleged” genocide, and thus trying to disguise the fact that Hrant Dink was being tried because he said “genocide” and was receiving threats because of this, and everyone who is protecting the real murderer, that is the ones who are allowing Union and Progress’ covert operator, lyncher, rabid spirit to still live on, has a share of responsibility.
                      The Justice Minister Hikmet Sami Turk, who yelled from the podiums of the congress that the ones who were organizing the Armenian conference were stabbing the Turkish people in the back, President Ahmet Necdet Sezer who vetoed the law proposal dealing with minority foundations on the grounds that it would strengthen minorities, the district attorneys who turn a blind eye on thousands of cases of torture, convictions without trial, unknown culprits taken into custody and lost, but processed and tried the alleged “notices of guilt” that are devoid of the most elementary notions of universal law, the newspaper Hurriyet that in the days Hrant Dink declared he was going to look for justice in the European Human Rights Courts, made front page news with the head of the Greek foundations who said he wouldn’t go to European Human Rights Courts as he trusted the Turkish Justice system, called him a true citizen, and therefore whomever tried to look for justice in the European H.R. Courts was shown as a target, branded as “so-called/pseudo” citizen, and, before Hrant’s blood was even dry, the Turkish Television stations that for hours debated a litany of provocation by relating it to the law proposal pending in the United States Congress, are all a part of this murder, they have a responsibility.
                      Everybody who says that this was an attack on Turkey is lying. Because this attack was made possible by Turkey herself therefore, Turkey is responsible. This attack was made possible by the government that has implemented article 301, as protection against only the denigration of Turkishness, not of all identities, thus providing a legal basis for aggression, and it was made possible by an entire population of Turkey who didn’t reject this article.
                      Everybody who, instead of feeling shame faced with the murder of Hrant Dink, instead of saying “we are all guilty”, worried about Turkey’s dignity, from the officials to the opinion leaders, they are all lying, they are trying to disguise their guilt. Let all the liars shut up.
                      And you shut up too please, democratic journalists like Altan Oymen. If you are not refusing to answer questions that link the murder of Hrant to the genocide recognition proposal in the US Congress, and do not see a problem replying to them, if you are not refusing to be disrespectful to the pain of the Armenian people by making such connections, if you are not rejecting to thus support the ones who are trying to fool people with conspiracy theories by foreign influences aimed at the Turkish people, just to exonerate our own murderers, shut up, all of you shut up.
                      LET ALL LIARS SHUT UP. HRANT’S WOUNDS ARE STILL BLEEDING.

                      Original source in Turkish

                      AYSE GUNALSU
                      General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X