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Assassination Of Hrant Dink

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#1001 Johannes

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Posted 16 May 2013 - 03:52 PM

http://www.todayszam...hrant-dink.html

http://voices.washin..._front_ex-.html

#1002 MosJan

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Posted 06 June 2013 - 10:30 AM

Street in Istanbul Gezi Park named after Hrant Dink

Posted Image
June 6, 2013 - 19:08 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - A street in Istanbul Gezi Park has been named after slain Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, with a symbolic grave installed in memory of destroyed Surp Hagop Armenian cemetery.
The protesters “opened” the street chanting “We are all Hrant Dinks, we are all Armenians”. Nor Zartonk initiative installed a gravestone, with the following note engraved, “1551-1939: our cemetery was destroyed: but you can’t deprive us of our park.”
The abandoned area in Istanbul’s Beyoğlu district is now called “Park Manukian”. The park was surrounded with a wooden fence following the owner’s death.
“Park Manukian” inscription has been fastened by protesters on the wall of the park, Aksam newspaper reported.

#1003 Yervant1

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Posted 17 September 2013 - 09:57 AM

HRANT DINK IS TURKEY'S MARTIN LUTHER KING: TANER AKCAM

http://armenpress.am...ner-akçam.html
16:26, 16 September, 2013

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS: Hrant Dink was Turkey's Martin
Luther King who struggled against discrimination for equality and
national unity. "Armenpress" reports that int he article written
in Turkish "Taraf" sich definitation to Dink gave famous Turkish
historian Taner Akcam. He suggested delcaring every second or third
Monday of September of each year Hrant Dink's Day as rhrid Monday of
January is considered Luther King's day in USA.

Now we live in a period of passing from totalitarian regime to more
democratic society. We reach the end of war between Turks and Kurds. In
past symbols keeping Turkey belonged to only a part of population. Now
those symbols do not exist. Hrant is the symbol of this new nation,"
writes Taner Akcam.

Speaking about Armenians gathering each year on the day when Dink
was killed Turkish historian records that such phenomenon happens for
the first time in Turkish history. "What is the secret of this? Have
you ever thought about it? His name hurts our heart that is seems his
murder touched our humanity," wrote Akcam mentioning that it was the
most planned crime in Turkish Republican history and all state bodies
took part in it.

Being Turkish on these lands partially symbolizes massacre of
Armenians. Our existence became possible by their destruction. With
his absence Dink again puts us in existence. In his absence we are
getting more united. Hrant introduces as a person who formed new human
society. For this reason I say that he is the symbol of new Turkey.

"The year has 365 days. Let the 364 be yours and give the other one
to Hrant," summarized Akcam.

 



#1004 Yervant1

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Posted 17 September 2013 - 09:59 AM

HRANT DINK BROKE THE CHAINS OF LIE IN TURKEY WITH HIS LIFE AND DEATH: HASSAN JEMAL

http://armenpress.am...ssan-jemal.html
14:31, 16 September, 2013

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS: There are people whose life and
death do not belong only to them but interest the society to which
they belong. Hrant Dink's life was just like that. "Armenpress"
reports making a reference on "Agos" that about this writes famous
Turkish journalist and publicists Hassan Jemal, grandson of Jemal
Pasah, one of the organizers of Armenian genocide.

"Our beloved Hrant livedand died so that opened way giving new
questions in Turkey and looking for new answers. He lived and died
so that people to study the past of this lands. Hrant lived so that
each person who had idea and breast began struggling for democracy,
law, freedom, Human Rights and liberties. Due to Hrant I became
free. Maybe due to him were broken the chains based on lie on which
I lived for many years," wrote Hassan Jemal in his article. In his
words disclosure of murder of Dink is the examination for Turkey in
part of democracy and Human Rights. According to Jemal without passing
that examine Turkey can be considered worthy country for those values.

Hassan Jemal being the grandson of one of organizers of Armenian
genocide has announced for many times that recognizes Armenian genocide
and visited Tsitsernakaberd in 2008.
 



#1005 Yervant1

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Posted 10 November 2013 - 12:58 PM

Turkish Intelligence Ordered Hrant Dink's Murder, Says Lawyer

Hrant Dink was the chief editor at Agos newspaper


YEREVAN (Armenpress) - Fethiye Çetin, the lawyer of Armenian journalist
Hrant Dink who was murdered by Turkish nationalists, has exposed new
details regarding this case in her new book titled I Am Ashamed:
Trials on Hrant Dink's Murder Trial. As Armenpress reports, citing
Turkish Haberler.com, Fethiye Çetin states in her book that the
National Intelligence Service of Turkey gave the order of Hrant Dink's
assassination via a secret code in Cyrillic alphabet.

Among other things, Fethiye Çetin emphasized that a man called
Ramazan, who introduced himself as a worker of the Chief Department of
the National Security Service of the Eastern Anatolia region, called
Çetin in March 2010 and said that he had important documents regarding
Hrant Dink's murder.

She got in touch with Ramazan via Skype, who showed her secret
documents with the emblem of the National Intelligence Service on it.
The unknown person told her that secret cryptograms are used in all
the documents. Dink's lawyer explains how they managed to read Dink's
name via Cyrillic alphabet in the aforesaid documents.


http://asbarez.com/1...er-says-lawyer/

 



#1006 Yervant1

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Posted 29 November 2013 - 09:28 AM

RAKEL DINK: "WE WILL CONTINUE THE PATH FORGED BY HRANT, BOTH IN LIFE AND DEATH"

Sako Arian

10:06, November 28, 2013

An entire history...What follows is my conversation with Rakel Dink,
who carries the burden of struggle and misfortune on her shoulders.

The widow of Hrant Dink, a man whose name and reputation are well-known
throughout Turkey, again visited Armenia. This time, it was to attend
the opening ceremonies of a school renamed in her late husband's honor.

This woman, calm, self-confident, but especially with eyes filled
with love and goodwill, talked to me about pain, sorrow, anguish,
indignation and her vision for the future.

What struck me most was her resolve to continue on the path set
out by Hrant which, like a red thread, weaved throughout our entire
conversation. But she did so without anger or malice, and especially
with a desire to listen to the person opposite her.

This Istanbul-Armenian woman also stressed that she is not an orator.

Mrs. Dink affirmed that Hrant Dink's death had opened a new page,
particularly for Armenians living throughout Turkey.

"He achieved more dead than alive," said Rakel Dink, adding, "The
Turks and Kurds found themselves caught up in a certain movement.

Every day, Islamized-Turkified Armenians send us their stories."

She also said that there is a certain positive shift all over Turkey.

However, while describing the situation, she also said that what still
isn't clear is the extent these developments have impacted society
at large. She explained: "People have begun a search for their past,
and a certain spirit of courage has surfaced. They have started not
to be fearful of their past. Many are still engaged in an effort to
search and find the religion of their forbearers; to recognize and
understand it. For example, the fact that special Armenian language
classes are being conducted today in Diyarbakir (Dikranagerd),
sponsored by the local municipality, must be seen in this context."

Mrs. Dink didn't forget to mention that this entire process now taking
place in Turkey requires steadfast resolve.

Before Hrant and After Hrant

"After Hrant, people started to talk more freely. This is why many
TV talk shows in Turkey started to use the phrase - before Hrant and
after Hrant. Many are trying to look to the past," she said, noting
that many are pushing their children to learn Armenian.

All of this, she said, requires struggle, courage and willpower,
because anyone in today's Turkey who wishes to return to his/her
roots must make a concerted effort to do so.

Answering my question regarding those from Armenia now living
in Turkey, Rakel Dink replied: "I do not believe that those who
left Armenia did so gladly." She also rejected my use of the word
'abandon', arguing that they didn't abandon Armenia, but were forced
to leave. "Conditions on the ground made them leave Armenia, and I
see the pain of longing in the eyes of many of them now living in
Istanbul. They all feel a longing for their native land. They want
Armenia to be a better place so that they can quickly return."

Malice Has No Future

Speaking about developments since the murder of Hrant Dink, and
especially about the overall situation in the Armenian world, Mrs.

Dink said: "I believe that after the death of Hrant, many in Armenia
and the diaspora began to look at the problems faced by the Armenian
people through his eyes. And it's wrong to say that after Hrant's
death a new path of hate took shape in the diaspora or Armenia against
Turks. If there were protest actions, they were only natural and merely
stemmed from a feeling of anger. In my opinion, malice leads to new
mistakes, and the same malice that can be seen as a consequence of
Hrant's murder, must not triumph over our resolve."

As to the court case dealing with Hrant Dink's murder, Mrs. Rakel
clarified the reasons why the Dink family decided to pull out of the
entire process.

"It's amazing that the court conducted no examination of the people
tied to the murder case. Hrant's murder was the work of a huge
network, and many closed their eyes or did nothing to stop it. The
Turkish government granted top positions to those involved in the
case, and in this way, paid them off. During the past six years,
the courts haven't conducted one serious investigation. There even
hasn't been an examination of the reports prepared by the president
or prime minister. Let me say that these reports note that the crime
was premeditated and how, on the day of the murder, many officials
and police weren't where they should have been, thus allowing the
perpetrator to get close to Hrant and kill him. For all these years,
the courts have been trying to tell us that the murder wasn't planned.

At one point, they even tried to convince us that Hrant was still
alive and well. Naturally, we had no desire to become a puppet in
the hands of the courts. Even witnesses linked to the incident never
showed up in court in the initial phase of the trial. What happened
on that day isn't that important as much as the entire process prior
to the murder."

"Hrant...Either Love Turkey or Leave"

Mrs. Dink also spoke about how a group of strangers visited the Agos
office in 2004 and placed a black wreath on the street outside where
Hrant was to be gunned down three years later. "It shows that they
already had decided to kill Hrant. I'll never forget how they were
chanting, 'Hrant, you are our target', 'Either love Turkey or leave',
'We'll come knocking on your door one night', and other threats. Thus,
the most important portion of this entire process is what transpired
prior to the murder. And it's clear that Hrant was being followed.

Despite all this, state security agencies were not at all interested
in his safety."

Rakel Dink also told me that photos of all the people who participated
in the hate protests were presented to the court, but the authorities
did nothing to identify them. "I believe that identifying these names
has some connection to the state mentality whose roots run deep,
and beneath which the real brain of the state machinery that has
committed genocide lies."

When I asked if she ever brought up the subject of leaving Turkey
with Hrant, Rakel Dink said: "Yes, we discussed the possibility. But
wherever Hrant would have gone, he'd struggle against injustice." She
added that it would even have been difficult for Hrant to relocate
to Armenia, since he never would have tolerated the ongoing injustice.

Rakel Dink also said the same about Dink family lawyer Fethiye Cetin,
who also believes that the courts did everything to cover up the real
reasons for Hrant's murder and those responsible.

Hrant Dink Foundation: Conferences on Western Armenia

Speaking about the work carried out by the Hrant Dink Foundation, Mrs.

Dink pointed out that their mission includes organizing academic
conferences. Of particular note is the fact that conferences focusing
on various regions of western Armenia take place in the very regions
themselves. As an example, she noted that last year's conference
on the Mardin region took place in the town of Mardin. Armenian,
Turkish and Kurdish experts participate in these conferences.

Mrs. Dink also said that during these conferences she is often
approached by Turks who express feelings of guilt when talking about
past events. "Two young Turks approached me in Mardin and spoke about
the guilt they felt. I told them that we had no ulterior motives
in talking about all this stuff, but that it would take courage to
discuss these tragic events together. As an example, I asked, 'if my
father is guilty of something, how long can I keep concealing it?"

In this context, Rakel Dink thinks it is very important for people
to be able to stand before history, and added, "Hrant would say that
we must learn to look history in the face."

She also pointed out that this year's conference was dedicated to the
important theme of Islamized Armenians. She said that these Armenians
merit our attention because they accepted Islam due to reasons beyond
their control, and that no one has the right to question their Armenian
identity, given that deep down, they feel Armenian.

Gomidas Didn't Go Mad, He Went Silent

"After the events of April 24, Gomidas Vartabed didn't go mad, he
went silent. After those events, all the borders for Gomidas were
transgressed. Even his lips were locked, a result of being confused,
stunned and bewildered by those tragic events," said Mrs. Dink, and
continued, "When the court issued its conclusion that the murder of
Hrant Dink wasn't planned, we all remained silent. And that's when
my mind fixed on Gomidas Vartabed."

She continued: "Prior to the Great Crime (Meds Yeghern) Gomidas was
well respected throughout Turkey. He was an important religious and
cultural figure, and had ties with the elite. He could even meet with
such top officials that even Turks couldn't get an audience with. But
Gomidas went silent when faced with the torture and brutality of what
transpired. We are also in that situation; of bewilderment, confusion
and puzzlement. Getting back to Gomidas, let me say that we couldn't
or didn't want to understand his silence, and we even regarded him as
someone who went mad. All of us knew that the court could issue such
a decision, but we wanted to believe, to be tricked into hoping, that
something would change. But alas... (long pause). We wanted to hope,
wanted to wait. We wanted that this process, which started with these
events and Hrant's murder, serve as an opportunity for the Armenian
and Turkish peoples to find a new path. We didn't permit the malice
and anger in our hearts to win out...but to no avail..."

Continuing, Rakel Dink noted: "Hrant would have wanted it that
way. It was all a part of his struggle. This is all a struggle of
life, and I reflected on it during my 'Letter to my beloved' eulogy
at Hrant's funeral. I wanted to see a window of hope out of Hrant's
murder, out of death. Hrant's death was destined to give us life,
and I see a Christian meaning of restoring life anew from his death."

An Electrified Turkey

Reflecting on the day that Hrant was murdered, Rakel Dink said:

"That day, all of Turkey experienced a jolt that continues to be felt.

I am confident that this jolt rippled out to each and every place
where there are Armenians. It resembles a stone that is thrown into
the sea, creating a continuous series of waves.

People carry that emotion till today. Frequently, I'll meet people
in the street who approach me and say, 'Mrs. Rakel, forgive us.

I also remember the time I was waiting for my luggage in the Paris
airport. Two Turkish women approached and said, 'Mrs. Rakel, please
don't leave Turkey.

True, all of Turkey doesn't think like this, but such examples are
important nevertheless. I believe that we have a long row to hoe."

(English translation: Hrant Gadarigian)

http://hetq.am/eng/i...d-deathâ€.html
 



#1007 Yervant1

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Posted 30 November 2013 - 10:51 AM

TURKISH JOURNALIST NEDIM SENER DEDICATES HIS PRESS FREEDOM AWARD TO THE MEMORY OF HRANT DINK

10:16 29.11.2013

Hrant Dink

Nedim Å~^ener, an investigative journalist with Turkey's Posta
newspaper, was honored with Press Freedom Award, a recognition for
his work in the Turkish press against a myriad of odds and challenges
that mar the profession in the country, Today's Zaman reports.

The Committee to Protect Journalists' 2013 International Press Freedom
Awards were presented to Ecuador's Janet Hinostroza, Egypt's Bassem
Youssef, Turkey's Nedim Å~^ener and Vietnam's Nguyen Van Hai in a
ceremony at New York's Waldorf Astoria hotel on Tuesday evening.

Å~^ener, who is among the four foreign journalists that were honored
with Press Freedom Awards for their work in the face of severe
reprisals, including physical threats and imprisonment, dedicated
his award to the memory of Hrant Dink, a journalist whose killing he
blames on the Turkish intelligence service.

"Hrant Dink was threatened by state officials because he had exercised
his freedom of expression. He was murdered because state officials
turned a blind eye to threats against him and failed to protect his
life," said Å~^ener in the ceremony in New York.

Å~^ener spent a year in jail awaiting trial on terrorism
charges following allegations his reporting had contributed to an
anti-government plot. He is currently free on conditional release
but faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted.

"Turkey is a record-breaker. Sixty journalists are jailed there on the
accusation of being terrorists -- that's more than anywhere else in
the world," Å~^ener said. "Most recently, several colleagues received
life terms after a trial that shocked the Turkish press corps. I feel
compelled to speak for them now. Don't be indifferent to their fate!

Demand their release!"

He said there is a disagreement between journalists and politicians
over the meaning of democracy as the latter view democray only through
the prism of ballot box and elections.

"For politicians,democracy means allowing people to vote every four
years. For journalists, democracy is an everyday experience. And the
essence of that experience is the people's right to be informed. It
is no coincidence that the first act of an authoritarian government
is to silence the press," Å~^ener said, addressing the increasing
government pressure on the press.

He also lamented on wide use of self-censorship by media outlets
in the face of government pressure. He said majority of the media
outlets remained indifferent to Gezi Park protests in June, exercising
self-censorship to avoid a crisis with the government.

"The events of Gezi Park over the summer revealed the scope of the
press freedom crisis in my country. Thirty journalists were hurt,
many were detained, and dozens were fired from their jobs because of
their Gezi coverage. But perhaps the gravest problem was that many
media outlets did not cover Gezi. Even though dramatic clashes were
taking place right outside their windows, many newsrooms chose to
self-censor for fear of official repercussions."

http://www.armradio....-of-hrant-dink/



#1008 Yervant1

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Posted 26 December 2013 - 03:37 PM

SUSPECT IN DINK CASE THREATENS TURKISH OFFICIAL

14:10 ~U 24.12.13

A suspect in the criminal case over the murder of Hrant Dink, the
editor-in-chief of the Turkish-Armenian publication Agos, has issued
threats to a senior Turkish police official.

In a letter to Engin Dinci, the chief of the Turkish Police
Intelligence Department, Erhan Tuncel has threatened to disclose the
ultra-nationalist Ergenekon organization's link to the murder if he
is not freed and provided with compensation by the next court hearing,
the Taraf newspaper reported,

Tuncel claimed in earlier testimonies that a band headed by Ramazan
Akyurek, chief of the Trabzon police, was behind the plot.

The letter reportedly spreads light on many questions, with Tuncel
threatening the Turkish senior police officer and saying he was among
the officials who used him.

Hrant Dink was gunned down outside his office on January 19, 2007.

Armenian News - Tert.am



#1009 Yervant1

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Posted 13 January 2014 - 10:28 AM

15:33 13/01/2014 » SOCIETY

Hurriyet Daily News: Jailed PKK leader honors memory of Hrant Dink

Abdullah Öcalan, the jailed leader of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), has honored the memory of Hrant Dink, an Armenian-Turkish journalist killed seven years ago in an ultranationalist plot, the Hurriyet Daily News reported.
“I greet the memory and the struggle of the precious child of the Armenian people, our brother Hrant,” Öcalan said in a message which was conveyed to the public on Jan. 11 following a visit to İmralı Island by two deputy parliamentary group chairs of the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP), İdris Baluken and Pervin Buldan, and People’s Democratic Party (HDP) deputy Sırrı Süreyya Önder.
“I hope to address our Armenian citizens with a comprehensive letter and have it ready for the anniversary of the massacre of Hrant,” Öcalan said.
Dink, the renowned editor-in-chief of Agos, which has been the voice of the small Armenian community in Istanbul for several years, was shot dead by Ogün Samast in front of his office in Istanbul on Jan. 19, 2007. Samast was sentenced to over 22 years in jail for the murder.
 
 

Source: Panorama.am



#1010 Yervant1

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Posted 19 January 2014 - 11:00 AM

May your soul rest in peace, dear Hrant son of Armenia. 



#1011 Yervant1

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Posted 20 January 2014 - 11:35 AM

EuroNews, France
Jan 19 2014


Murdered journalist Hrant Dink remembered in Istanbul march

19/01 18:30 CET

Murdered Armenian journalist Hrant Dink has been remembered with a
march through Istanbul on the seventh anniversary of his death.

The renowned former editor-in-chief of Agos newspaper was shot dead in
broad daylight outside his work premises.

Extreme nationalist teenager, Ogün Samast was convicted of
pre-meditated murder and sentenced to 22 years and 10 months in prison
for carrying out the assassination.

But many people - including those on the march - believe higher powers
masterminded the plan against a man who openly rejected Turkey's
denial of the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

`Government agencies, both covert and public, are involved in Hrant
Dink's murder,' said one man on the march. `They're now in a power
struggle. But the case is not really moving forward. They're trying to
cover the truth up. They shot him together, they killed him together,
they protected others together and now they're covering it up
together. Therefore, they're all guilty.'

The acquittal of top suspects in the original trial has since been
overturned by the Supreme Court of Appeals.

Some suspects who had previously been cleared of instigating the
murder - such as Yasin Hayal and Erhan Tuncel - are now being retried.

The `Friends of Hrant Dink' organisation set up the march to call for
justice in the unresolved case. It claims that almost all of the civil
servants who were involved in the death of the journalist were
encouraged by the government.

Euronews' correspondent in Istanbul says:

`Hrant Dink was not just remembered on the seventh anniversary of his
murder, but his friends and colleagues also called for justice. They
demanded the trial of not only the man who pulled the trigger, but
those who steered him to pull it.'

http://euronews.com/...istanbul-march/
 



#1012 Yervant1

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Posted 21 January 2014 - 12:10 PM

HRANT DINK REMEMBERED AT RUINED ARMENIAN CHURCH IN TURKEY

January 20, 2014 | 15:00

Those that gathered at the ruined Surp Harutyun (Holy Resurrection)
Armenian church, which is located in Ergeni village of Hozat region
of Turkey's Tunceli (Dersim) Province, commemorated the seventh-year
anniversary of the murder of Hrant Dink.

The mayor of Hozat, members of the pro-Kurdish "Peace and Democracy
Party" (BDP), and the local residents gathered at the church on Sunday
and conducted a remembrance ceremony for Dink, reports Agos Armenian
weekly of Istanbul.

The participants lit candles before Dink's photograph and,
subsequently, one of them made a statement and held a sign that read,
"For Hrant, for justice."

Hrant Dink, the founder and former chief editor of Agos, was killed on
January 19, 2007 in front of the weekly's office. The ongoing trials
into Dink's murder, however, have not yet exposed those behind this
assassination.

http://news.am/eng/news/190043.html



#1013 Yervant1

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Posted 24 January 2014 - 11:18 AM

HASAN CEMAL SPEAKS AT DINK COMMEMORATION IN TORONTO

By Raffi Bedrosyan // January 22, 2014 in Canada

TORONTO, Canada-On Jan. 19, the Toronto Armenian community gathered
to commemorate the 7th anniversary of the assassination of Hrant Dink.

More than 500 people filled the Armenian General Benevolent Union
Centre to capacity, with standing room only. The keynote speaker was
renowned Turkish journalist and author Hasan Cemal, who also happens
to be the grandson of Cemal Pasha, one of the three leaders of the
Committee of Union and Progress (Ittihat ve Terakki), which planned
and perpetrated the Armenian Genocide in 1915.

Cemal (L) and Bedrosyan

Mgrditch Mgrditchian was the master of ceremonies. After a beautiful
rendition of Sari Aghchig and Cilicia by young soprano Lynn Anoush
Isnar, Raffi Bedrosyan, one of Hrant's friends, introduced Hasan
Cemal. Bedrosyan explained that Hasan Cemal worked for many years
(until 1992) as the editor-in-chief of the Cumhuriyet daily, the
official mouthpiece of the Kemalist state and the defender of the
denialist official version of history related to the 1915 events.

Hasan Cemal then moved on to Sabah newspaper, the newspaper with the
largest circulation at the time, as editor (until 1998), and then to
Milliyet until March 2013, when he had to resign under pressure from
Prime Minister Erdogan for criticizing the anti-democratic policies
of the government. In recent years, Hasan Cemal got influenced by
the writings of journalist Hrant Dink and historian Taner Akcam, and
started questioning the veracity of the state version of history. As
a result, he went through a gradual intellectual transformation, until
he reached the conclusion that those events were indeed a genocide. In
2008, the year after Hrant Dink was assassinated, he went to Armenia
and visited the Genocide Memorial, placing flowers there for Hrant
and all the past genocide victims, sharing their pain. In 2012, he
wrote a book titled 1915: Armenian Genocide in Turkish. The book,
explaining his personal evolution, became a bestseller.

In his speech, Hasan Cemal stressed the need to separate personal
family history from general history. He gave examples as to how
he had to distinguish between his grandfather's actions versus his
stand against the genocide, and his dramatic meeting in Yerevan with
the grandson of one of the planners of Cemal Pasha's assassination in
Tbilisi in 1922. Hasan Cemal also explained the long journey he had to
go through from having a "captive" mind, based on the state version
of history, to an "emancipated" or "liberated" mind, after seeking
and finding the facts and truth about the 1915 events. Cemal stated
that a small but fast increasing segment of the Turkish civil society
has already started to acknowledge the truth about the genocide,
and urged the Turkish state also to face its past and acknowledge
and apologize for the 1915 events.

After his speech, there was a short discussion session among Hasan
Cemal and two Zoryan Institute representatives, president Kurken
Sarkissian and Executive Director George Shirinian, moderated by
Raffi Bedrosyan, about the significance of building a "common body of
knowledge" regarding the historic facts of 1915, in order to be able
to have meaningful and constructive dialogue toward reconciliation
between Turks and Armenians.

The Toronto commemoration was another proof that Hrant Dink's legacy
lives on and gains more momentum every year, both within Turkey and
in all four corners of the world, with demands of truth and justice
to prevail for the 1.5 million Armenians plus one.

http://www.armenianw...ion-in-toronto/
 



#1014 Yervant1

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Posted 25 January 2014 - 12:17 PM

FRENCH PRESIDENT TO MEET WIDOW OF ARMENIAN-TURKISH JOURNALIST HRANT DINK

12:17 24.01.2014

France, Francois Hollande, Hrant Dink

French President Francois Hollande will conduct a historic visit to
Turkey next week during which he will sit down with Rakel Dink, the
widow of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, who was assassinated
seven years ago, the Hurriyet Daily New reports.

The Armenian Genocide issue has has long poisoned relations between
Turkey and France. In an effort to put relations back on track,
Hollande will try to prevent the genocide issue from overshadowing his
efforts to improve ties with Ankara. In this respect, he is expected
to give messages of reconciliation as the Turkish government is also
keen on mending fences with Armenia, with which it has no diplomatic
relations, the article reads.

Hollande's meeting with the widow of Hrant Dink, a figure that
worked for Turkish-Armenian reconciliation, will take place within
that setting. Rakel Dink is currently the director of the Hrant
Dink Foundation.

Hollande will become the first French president to conduct a state
visit to Turkey in 22 years; following his official talks in Ankara,
he will hold several meetings in Istanbul.

http://www.armradio....ist-hrant-dink/



#1015 Yervant1

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Posted 26 January 2014 - 10:42 AM

World Crunch
Jan 25 2014


Death Of An Armenian Editor, Crimes Of Turkish History

Seven years after the assassination of Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant
Dink, silence remains on the crime of incitement to murder - just like
last century's Armenian Genocide.


Ahmet Insel (2014-01-25)

OpEd-

ISTANBUL - Last Sunday was the seventh anniversary of the
assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

For seven years, the 'coalition of silence' reigns, blocking the
revelation and prosecution of those responsible for the atmosphere
that led to the death of the so-called `treacherous Armenian.' These
forces guided and encouraged the murderer, and praised the act he
carried out, and continue to do so seven years later.

Those who pushed a 17-year-old to commit this murder, knowing he would
get a reduced sentence, have been touched by nobody. The court voiced
its powerlessness. Those within the state structure who knew such a
murder was in the works got promoted; one even became a cabinet
member.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has recently removed the chief of
police who failed to prevent a corruption probe regarding his close
circle, crossed his name, but awarded those who were responsible for
allowing the murder of Hrant Dink. The conservative coalition of power
in vicious conflict today was in harmony when it came to prosecute the
triggerman, and to not confront the rest.



The prime minister who does not hesitate one second to shake down the
police and judiciary to defend himself, the government, his AKP
party's administration holds on to a hypocritical silence to not to
reveal the power organization behind the murder of the Armenian
newspaper editor.

Poison gas

The murder of Hrant was not an isolated event. The killing of Sevag
Balikci while serving in the military in 2011 in the Batman province
by a `stray bullet' from his friend's rifle on April 24; the
anniversary of the great massacre the Armenians were exposed to in
1915 and after, the great crime, the Genocide was not an isolated
event either. Nor were the slayings of the Italian Priest Andrea
Santoro and the employees of the Zirve Publishing House in Malatya.
All of these acts are a manifestation of the same mentality. Even if
they were not ordered from somewhere specific, they are acts fueled by
the same poison gas the ruling powers have released in this society's
atmosphere for centuries.

The criminals are the ones who use this poison gas of nationalism for
its own ends; and for its secular version ultranationalism, the
Muslim-Turk chauvinism that has sought to create a 99% Muslim society
- and yet are not satisfied with that, and pray onward for a 100%
Muslim Turkey. This is the foundational crime of the Republic of
Turkey. The murder of Hrant is a link in the chain of these massacres,
murders, rapes, confiscations, pillages and organized violations of
rights.



And on forgiveness?

Of course, it is not easy to face such a great crime, especially if
the individuals who forged the founding links in this criminal chain
have long since died. Moreover, if the guilty parties have inherited
an entire society that is in partnership with the crime. The title of
French criminal lawyer Antoine Garapon's 2002 book describes the
situation between Turkey and the Armenians: `Crimes That Can Be
Neither Punished, Nor Forgiven.'


In his book, Garapon states that the Nuremberg and Tokyo trials were
firsts, and it became even harder at the end of the 1990's to hide
behind national sovereignty to avoid prosecution for crimes against
humanity. He says it is a meaningful coincidence that the NATO planes
started bombing Serbia to stop the mass murder in Kosovo on March 24,
1999 was the day the British House of Lords decided to eliminate the
immunity of Chile's bloody dictator General Augusto Pinochet.

That day 15 years ago is the symbolic moment when the traditional
right of sovereignty, by both judicial and militaristic means, could
no longer stand in the way of the fight against such crimes. This was
followed by the first international crime investigation against a
sitting head of state and the start of the trial of Slobodan Milosevic
on October 12, 2001. The International Criminal Court was founded in
2002, authorized to prosecute crimes against humanity within its
jurisdiction.

The aim of the court is to answer the mass murders in the name of
humanity. Because, more often than not, either the legal system of the
countries where these crimes are committed is unsuitable to try them,
or the criminals have the power to challenge the law.

In fact, these are crimes the penal law are often unfamiliar with;
ones committed, encouraged or assisted by a political decision from a
ruling administration. Garapon states these crimes are committed by
making a part of the society, mostly a big part, partners in crime
with the support of the rule of law. And so it is not possible to
pursue these crimes with the traditional penal law methods - and gets
even more complicated if they were committed during a state of war.



Time to speak

The Allies of World War I have jointly declared the ethnic cleansing
committed against the Armenians by the Ottomans was `a crime against
humanity and civilization' on May 24, 1915. The concept of crimes
against humanity was first mentioned in relation to this event.

A great national alliance in Turkey has been at work since then to
leave this great crime undefined and the partners in crime
unprosecuted; if we do not count the parentheses opened and shortly
closed during the 1919 trials. There is a great coalition of silence
and cooperation formed to deny the great crime committed against the
Armenians; to leave it undebated, forgotten.

This is the seventh anniversary of the slaying of Hrant. In a few
months, it will be the 99th anniversary of the act that eliminated the
Armenians from these lands. Call it anything we want: crime against
humanity, Genocide, the great crime, the great disaster, the great
sin; we are talking about the same enormous crime in the end.

Is it not time for today's Republic of Turkey to declare its deep
sorrow for such a crime, and apologize to all Armenians after 100
years of silence?

And let us not forget: this great crime is not just a legacy of the
past. The same crimes are being committed today, right here. The ones
who defend the offenders are together keeping their silence alive. We
will not be a part of this by staying silent ourselves. For Hrant, for
justice.


http://www.worldcrun...0/#.UuQiuz_8LIU
 



#1016 Yervant1

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Posted 31 January 2014 - 10:38 AM

FRENCH PRESIDENT MET DINK'S WIDOW DURING TURKEY VISIT

16:33 29.01.2014

French President Francois Hollande met with Rakel Dink, the widow of
slain Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, at the French Place in
Istanbul's Beyoglu district, as part of his two-day official visit
to Turkey.

The meeting was held behind closed doors. After the half an hour
meeting Orhan Dink made a brief statement to reporters, stressing
that the meeting was personal and not of interest for the public.

Asked whether the Armenian Genocide issue was discussed, he said "no."

IN turn, Rakel dink said: "We did not talk about anything you do
not know."

http://www.armradio....g-turkey-visit/



#1017 Yervant1

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Posted 04 March 2014 - 11:19 AM

ZIRVE PUBLISHING HOUSE, DINK, SANTORO MURDERS CARRIED OUT BY TUSHAD, SAYS PROSECUTOR

Today's Zaman, Turkey
March 2 2014

2 March 2014 /TODAY'S ZAMAN.COM, Ä°STANBUL A prosecutor's report
stated that three high-profile murders in the country were ordered by
the National Strategies and Operations Department of Turkey (TUSHAD),
according to Turkish news outlets on Sunday.

The report, which was issued by the public prosecutor of the Malatya
3rd High Criminal Court, alleges that the Zirve Publishing House
massacre, the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink and
the killing of Italian Catholic priest Andrea Santoro had all been
orchestrated by TUSHAD.

Three employees of the Christian Zirve Publishing House were tortured
and murdered in 2007 in the province of Malatya. Dink was murdered
by a young ultranationalist outside his office in Ä°stanbul, while
Santoro was killed in a church in the eastern Black Sea province of
Trabzon in 2006.

There was extensive speculation that the murders were linked as they
had occurred approximately within a year of each other and targeted
Christians.

TUSHAD is an alleged clandestine organization under the umbrella of
the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK) which prosecutors in the Ergenekon
trials argued was founded by retired Gen. HurÅ~_it Tolon. Tolon, who
was sentenced to life imprisonment in the Ergenekon trials last year,
denied that the organization exists.

http://www.todayszam...prosecutor.html



#1018 Yervant1

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Posted 08 March 2014 - 08:06 AM

Kangaroo justice!!!!!!!!!! 

KEY SUSPECT IN HRANT DINK MURDER TRIAL ERHAN TUNCEL RELEASED

17:58 â~@¢ 07.03.14

Erhan Tuncel, considered one of the key suspects in the retrial into
the murder of Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, was released
by an Istanbul court on March 7, the Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Erhan Tuncel was one of the key names suspected of planning the murder
and was acquitted in the first trial, sparking an outcry.

The original prosecutor in charge of the trial, which resumed on Sept.

17, 2013, Muammer AkkaÅ~_, was dismissed as part of a wave of purges
within the judiciary.

Dink, the renowned editor-in-chief of Agos, which has been the voice of
Istanbul's small Armenian community for several decades, was shot dead
by Ogun Samast in front of his office in Istanbul on Jan. 19, 2007.

Samast was sentenced to over 22 years in jail for the murder, but
lawyers representing the Dink family have repeatedly expressed
their dismay over the way the investigations and the trial have
been conducted.

Armenian News - Tert.am

 



#1019 Yervant1

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Posted 10 March 2014 - 08:40 AM

furkish justice is a kangaroo justice!!!!!!!!! Can you tell me that these killings were not sanctioned by the government of furkey?

 

Turkey frees five charged over 2007 murders of Christian missionaries

12:29 ¢ 09.03.14


A Turkish court has freed five men accused of torturing and murdering
three Christian missionaries in 2007, after the suspects' time in
detention while on trial exceeded new legal limits
, the Hurriyet Daily
News reports.

The men walked free from their high-security prison in the eastern
city of Malatya on March 7, DoÄ?an News Agency reported.

German missionary Tilmann Geske and Turkish converts Necati Aydın and
UÄ?ur Yüksel had their throats slit in the Zirve Publishing House in
April 2007 after being tied up and interrogated about missionary
activities.

The three victims were members of the city's tiny Protestant
community. The trial of the five men accused of the attack is still
going on seven years later.

Under a new law passed by the Turkish parliament last month, the
detention limit for suspects on trial who have not yet been convicted
was lowered to five years, paving the way for the five accused to be
released on bail.

The murders at the time fuelled fear among Turkey's tiny Christian
minorities and raised concern over rising nationalism and hostility
towards non-Muslims in Turkey, a mainly Muslim country seeking
European Union membership.


Armenian News - Tert.am

 



#1020 Yervant1

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Posted 07 June 2014 - 10:56 AM

15:45 07/06/2014 » LAW

Turkish officials could face investigation over Hrant Dink murder

Key officials in Turkey could face a probe regarding the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink on charges of intent or negligence after an Istanbul court overturned a previous ruling, Hurriyet Daily reports, according to Asbarez
An Istanbul court has lifted a previous decision, which has ruled that there was no need for sanctions against the former deputy governor of Istanbul, Ergun Güngör, Istanbul Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah, former Istanbul Police Department Intelligence Head Ahmet İlhan Güler, and six police officers regarding the 2007 assassination.
The court recommended an investigation into nine officials following a European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) decision. A lawyer for the Dink family, Hasan Bakırcıoğlu, confirmed that it is now legally possible for a probe against Güngör, Cerrah, Güler, and six police officers.
Dink, the highly esteemed former editor-in-chief of weekly Agos, was murdered in broad daylight in front of his newspaper’s building on Jan. 19, 2007, by a 17-year-old Turkish nationalist. The triggerman, Ogün Samast, was convicted of premeditated murder and sentenced to 22 years and 10 months of prison after a two year-trial, but lawyers representing the Dink family have repeatedly expressed their dismay over the way the investigations and the trial were conducted.
His assassination sent shockwaves through Turkey and grew into a wider scandal after it emerged that the security forces knew of a plot to kill Dink, but failed to act.
Backing up widespread accusations of a state conspiracy, another key figure in the trial, Erhan Tuncel, claimed in December 2013 that he had informed the police of the plan, but that his warnings went unheeded.
There have been suggestions that the killing was a result of “deep state” work, but the court said there was no organization behind the murder. According to reports, Dink was called to a police department and “warned” about the plot against him, fueling belief that the murder was known by some institutions within the state beforehand. 
 

Source: Panorama.am






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