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France: 1ST RELEASE OF MOVEMENT CHARJOUM- The Armenian people is struggling

April 21, 2016 By administrator

Paris 125155-480x275Paris, 21 April 2016

Here is the call published by Charjoum-Movement, on the occasion of the commemorations of the Armenian Genocide of 2016.

Charjoum is a new movement made up of activists who want to promote a new approach to the Armenian cause, supporting the Armenian struggle for emancipation.

Charjoum movement means in Armenian, and his goal is to move the lines.

Charjoum is not an additional or a combination of more chapel. This movement wants to defend the interests of Armenians with freedom of thought and in a participatory form. It is also in favor of a cultural approach, political and social struggles of the Armenian people.

Charjoum is an independent movement of the political parties, but it will support initiatives and associations that fight for the rights of Armenians and peoples, for the conquest of freedoms, the affirmation of human dignity, for equality and justice.

Here is the website of the movement: http://www.charjoum.org/

We invite you to follow us on Twitter (@Charjoum) and Facebook (Charjoum movement):

https://twitter.com/charjoum

https://www.facebook.com/Charjoum-le-mouvement-167478733646233/? fref = ts

Charjoum – The Movement

contact@charjoum.org

The centennial year is officially over. During this time of commemoration, the structures of Armenian communities worldwide, various associations, churches and some public institutions have honored the victims of the 1915 genocide and their descendants. The Armenian and Armenians of Diaspora we are, and without claiming to be representative of all we nevertheless remain interrogative on the overall project of this tangle of commemorations.

For indeed, it is symbolically important to honor our dead. But these deaths, as the harm caused by the genocide against the Armenian people not only fall under the symbol or the past. For proof, the nationalism of the Turkish and Azerbaijani states have lost nothing of their death designs against our people.

Armenian associations have conducted considerable work that is not for us here underestimate or question. But in a more global thinking, we believe that the Armenian people can not build sustainable if it comes out of the celebration process of suffering and sorrow.

It appears essential to us to take a deep reflection on the future of our post genocide claims. This reflection should be open and democratic; it can not be confined to the circle of community structures in loss of representativeness. For us, Armenian and Armenians committed and concerned about the future of our people, it seems that the only memory can be a real project up to the challenges of the Armenian people. Our memory must move past in the present to take lessons and augur a different future.

That’s a different future that we are calling for, with all the required determination and hope when it comes to the future of a people, so weakened by the crimes but also the domination or indifference of the powerful. Think the future is our responsibility to all.

For our part, we envision a future of struggle for our people, who 101 years after the crime, stopped crying. This struggle is that of all the peoples, groups, individuals against principalities imposed on us, be they military, physical, or intellectual.

Fighting is first to assert his rights, claiming its freedom to determine its future and to present to the world as an upright people, who does not want to be chained by suffering or threats from neighboring states. Our rights are for all people and we naturally demand justice consecutively to genocide. This justice is not a mere acknowledgment of the past and must repair all the damage suffered by the Armenian people. But it would be fragmented and sterile if it only concerned our relationship with the Turkish state. Justice, we also demand within our people. Thus, we stand in solidarity with our sisters and of Armenia and Artsakh brothers who struggle daily to defend their land, but also to improve their living conditions, against the corruption of their leaders that stifle reconstruction a people who finally saw freedom, for equality between all citizens and citizens and the establishment of genuine democracy.

Finally, we call on all those and all those who are weary of inaction, all those and all those who wish to fight peacefully, to appear in street processions of 24 April 2016 and can bloom wherever the debate on new claims .

We have finished crying. Long live the Armenian people in struggle!  www.charjoum.org

Thursday, April 21, 2016,
Ara © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, charjoum, people, struggle

France: MARSEILLE County Council Commemorates #ArmenianGenocide

April 21, 2016 By administrator

France 125133-480x360The president of the County Council of Bouches-du-Rhône, Martine Vassal, inaugurated on April 19 evening a banner in memory of the 1915 genocide.

The sentences were well constructed and the words chosen were strong. President South CCAF, Simon Azilazian set the tone for an evening where Armenians Bouches du Rhône were invited to County Council in Marseille for the unveiling of a banner in memory of the genocide victims.

“Despite the centenary of the many tragic events of 1915 marked by actions in France, Europe and around the world, led by Erdogan Turkey continues its disinformation campaign, and denial-fixing. It approves the Azerbaijani aggression against Nagorno-Karabakh. Today, Jihadism and Pan-Turkism are one. With Erdogan, Turkey has become an Islamo-fascist state that imprisons journalists. Between Daesch and Europe, Turkey has to choose. Our duty of memory beyond the framework of the Armenian Genocide. Our values are: Liberty, Equality and Fraternity. We say yes to peace and no to war “insisted Simon Azilazian during his speech applauded at length.

Invited to speak, the MP Valérie Boyer said that “Nagorno-Karabakh is an Armenian land” and denounced “the indifference of the media that does not treat Azerbaijani aggression with the complicity of Turkey against the Armenians of this Republic.

President of the Departmental Council of Bouches-du-Rhône, Martine Vassal, believed “we need to have the United Armenian associations to demand the recognition of the Genocide of 1915. It is encouraging to see the new generation represented by Scouts continue this fight. I salute the spirit of resistance of the Armenian people and its dignity, courage and strength. We must combat Holocaust denial and must awaken consciences. It is time that the Turkish state is changing. I think the French government is cautious about what is happening in Karabakh, “concluded Martine Vassal which stated that on May 23, the County Council of the Bouches du Rhône will receive Charles Aznavour. In June, she will visit Armenia with a delegation of elected officials and members of the Chamber of Commerce French Armenian.

We noted in the audience attendance Maurice Di Nocera, Deputy Mayor of Marseille and Departmental Councillor Didier Parakian, Deputy Mayor of Marseille. JAF was represented by the President and by Pascal Julien Harounyan Chamassian. FRA Dashnaksoutioun was also represented. Raffi Delanian and Karen Khurshudian headed the delegation of the Apostolic Scouts. It also noted the presence of Pastor Gilbert Leonian and Father Aram, representing the Prado Cathedral.

Thursday, April 21, 2016,
Claire © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: #armenianGenocide, Commemorates, council, County, Marseille

‘Laura McKenzie’s Traveler-Armenia’ to Air on April 23

April 21, 2016 By administrator

Host Laura McKenzie takes viewers on a once in a lifetime journey through Armenia during a one-hour TV special. (PRNewsFoto/Associated Television Internati)

Host Laura McKenzie takes viewers on a once in a lifetime journey through Armenia during a one-hour TV special. (PRNewsFoto/Associated Television Internati)

LOS ANGELES—Emmy-nominated host Laura McKenzie’s one-hour primetime special, Laura McKenzie’s Traveler-Armenia, in honor of Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day will air April 23 in major U.S. markets, including KTLA Channel 5 in Los Angeles, the Broadway World reports.

In the new primetime special, Laura gives a firsthand account of her explorations through Armenia, including destinations like the capital city of Yerevan, Tsitsernakaberd: The Genocide Museum and Memorial, the ancient Temple of Garni, and the Monastery of Tatev, featuring the longest gondola ride in the world. She also discovers local markets, learns to make ethnic cuisine, and tries her hand at the ancient art of carpet weaving. While there, she gets a personal account of the dismal conditions during the war years in Yerevan by the famed international conductor, Maestro George Pehlivanian.

“Armenia was a total surprise to me. I was not expecting it to be so incredibly fascinating, not only for ancient sites and natural beauty, but for the friendliness of the people,” Laura said. “Armenians love Americans and their hospitality is genuine.”

Laura McKenzie is the number one television travel expert in the country. She has received dozens of awards including two Emmy nominations and a Gracie Award for her Syndicated television series, “Laura McKenzie’s Traveler.” She’s written and produced 42 home videos on travel and appears on national talk shows as a travel expert. She co-hosted “World’s Funniest Moments” and 10 seasons of “American Adventurer” with Erik Estrada and is the permanent co-host of the annual Hollywood Christmas Parade.

She is also a contributing writer for “USA Weekend Magazine” and won the “Video of the Decade” award from Billboard Magazine for “Laura McKenzie’s Travel Tips-Hawaii,” distributed by Republic Pictures, broadcast on the Travel Channel and Discovery.

“Laura McKenzie’s Traveler,” the number one travel show on broadcast television, will air the special locally in all major markets across the US, including: Los Angeles, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Boston, Seattle, and more.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: April 23, Laura McKenzie’s, Traveler-Armenia’

Los Angeles: Documentaries “Orphans of the Genocide” and “Uprooted” to Air on KCET

April 21, 2016 By administrator

472016_110742_1LOS ANGELES— Documentary “Orphans of the Genocide” will be featured on April 24 at 1:30 p.m. PT on KCET, while documentary “Uprooted” will premiere at 8 p.m. ET/PT nationwide on Link TV (DirecTV Channel 375 and Dish Network Channel 9410) and at 7 p.m. PT in Southern California on KCET.

“Orphans of the Genocide,” Emmy award-winning Director Bared Maronian’s critically-acclaimed documentary, sheds light on crimes against humanity and tells part of a larger story of the Armenian genocide of 1915 through the eyes of some of its more than 130,000 orphaned children. The documentary focuses on one orphanage, Antoura, where 1,000 children orphaned by the Armenian genocide lived and were forcefully converted to Turkish beliefs and culture during World War I. The film features never-before-seen archival footage as well as recently discovered memoirs of orphans.

“Uprooted” is a documentary from Producer and Director Hagop Goudsouzian that traces the evolution of Armenian culture, identity and heritage. Research in “Uprooted” weaves together stories in an attempt to answer the question of what being Armenian means in America today. Goudsouzian’s personal and passionate film features interviews with expert sources who continue to delve into the critical elements of Armenian identity.

As an additional way for KCET and Link TV programming to amplify the importance of recognizing the Armenian Genocide, viewers who tune-in to the broadcast will have the opportunity to receive DVD copies of “Uprooted” as a gift for a $60 donation, or acclaimed filmmaker Hagop Goudsouzian’s DVD trilogy set of “Armenian Exile, My Son Shall Be Armenian” and “Uprooted” for a $150 donation.

In addition to the broadcast documentaries, KCET.org is offering multimedia content that showcases stories that allow users to further explore more history on Armenian heritage:

–I Am Armenian: The Intriguing Life of Aurora Mardiganian
–Visiting With Huell Howser: Armenian Christmas Meal, [www.kcet.org/shows/visiting-with-huell-howser/episodes/armenian-christmas-meal]
–Subtle Commemoration: Pasadena’s Armenian Genocide Memorial, [ www.kcet.org/shows/artbound/subtle-commemoration-pasadenas-armenian-genocide-memorial]
–Armenian-American Artists Reflect the Diaspora Experience, [ www.kcet.org/shows/artbound/armenian-american-artists-reflect-the-diaspora-experience]

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: documentary, Genocide, Los Angeles, orphans

Italy: Sicily regional parliament recognizes #ArmenianGenocide

April 21, 2016 By administrator

210758The Sicilian Regional Assembly on Wednesday, April 20 unanimously recognized the Armenian Genocide, becoming the 105th council at the self-government level to have done so in Italy.

In a resolution, the parliament expresses solidarity and support to the Armenian people’s struggle for the recognition of this historical truth.

Also, the resolution calls on the local and Italy’s national governments to jointly promote the events aimed at raising awareness of the massacres for the sake of peace, democracy and the peoples’ right to self-determination.

The Armenian Genocide

The Armenian Genocide (1915-23) was the deliberate and systematic destruction of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during and just after World War I. It was characterized by massacres, and deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of deaths reaching 1.5 million.

The majority of Armenian Diaspora communities were formed by the Genocide survivors.

Present-day Turkey denies the fact of the Armenian Genocide, justifying the atrocities as “deportation to secure Armenians”. Only a few Turkish intellectuals, including Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk and scholar Taner Akcam, speak openly about the necessity to recognize this crime against humanity.

The Armenian Genocide was recognized by Uruguay, Russia, France, Lithuania, the Italian Chamber of Deputies, majority of U.S. states, parliaments of Greece, Cyprus, Argentina, Belgium and Wales, National Council of Switzerland, Chamber of Commons of Canada, Polish Sejm, Vatican, European Parliament and the World Council of Churches.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Genocide, recognize armenian, Sicily

Adam Schiff delivers open letter to Obama, urges to recognize #ArmenianGenocide (Video)

April 21, 2016 By administrator

Gongress man  schiffU.S. Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA), the lead sponsor of the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution in Congress, spoke on the House Floor and delivered an open letter to the President of the United States, Barack Obama, urging him to recognize the Armenian Genocide in his final year in office in advance of the 101st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

The text of the letter is as follows:

“Dear Mr. President:

In 2009, less than a year after assuming the Presidency, you accepted the Nobel Peace Prize. You began your acceptance of this honor by acknowledging that it was bestowed, at the “beginning, and not the end, of my labors on the world stage.” You spoke on that day with eloquence and conviction about fundamental human rights – rights that are endowed not by accidents of birth like nationality or ethnicity or gender, but by our common humanity. And the principles that you articulated have indeed guided and defined your presidency.

In your foreign policy, you have emphasized the rights of ethnic and religious minorities worldwide and put these causes closer to the center of our foreign policy. You have extended aid to refugees fleeing horrific violence. You established the Atrocities Prevention Board to coordinate and monitor our efforts to prevent mass atrocities and genocide.

And in a few days, you will have a chance to add to your legacy.

On April 24th, the world will mark 101 years since the systematic extermination of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923. The facts of the slaughter are beyond dispute. And I know you are well-acquainted with these horrors visited upon the Armenian people, having spoken eloquently about them as Senator.

I have sat with survivors of the Genocide. Men and women, their numbers dwindling year after year, and heard them recall the destruction of their lives and their families and all they had known. As children, they were forced from their homes and saw their families beaten, raped, and murdered. They fled across continents and oceans to build lives in our nation.

Mr. President, for them and for their descendants, the word “genocide” is sacred because it means the world has not and will not forget. To deny genocide on the other hand, is profane. It is, in the words of Elie Wiesel, a “double killing.”

This April 24th will be your final opportunity to use the presidency to speak plainly about the genocide. In past years as President, you have described the campaign of murder and displacement against the Armenian people as a “mass atrocity,” which it surely was. But, of course, it was also much more, and you have avoided using the word genocide even though it has been universally applied by scholars and historians of the period. In fact, as you know better than most, the Ottoman Empire’s campaign to annihilate the Armenian people was a prime example of what Rafael Lemkin was trying to describe when he coined the very term “genocide”.

I know that as you consider your words this year, you will hear the same voices as in the past who will tell you to hold your tongue and speak in euphemisms. They will say that the time is not right or that Turkey is too strategically important or that we should not risk their ire over something that happened a century ago.

Mr. President, regardless of what you say on April 24th, there can be little doubt that Turkey will do exactly as it has always done in its relations with the United States – and that is whatever Turkey believes to be in its self-interest. Many of our European allies and world leaders, including Pope Francis, have recognized the genocide, yet they have continued to work closely with Turkey, because that has been in Turkey’s interest. The same will be true after U.S. recognition of the Genocide.

I dearly hope, as do millions of Armenians descended from genocide survivors around the world, that you take this final opportunity to call the Armenian Genocide what it was – Genocide. To say that the Ottoman Empire committed this grotesque crime against the Armenians, but that their campaign of extermination failed. And that, above all, we will never forget and we will never again be intimidated into silence. Let this be part of your legacy, and you will see future Administrations follow your example.

When you spoke in Oslo, more than 7 years ago, you closed your remarks by returning to the counsel of Dr. Martin Luther King and said, “I refuse to accept the idea that the ‘isness’ of man’s present condition makes him morally incapable of reaching up for the eternal ‘oughtness’ that forever confronts him.”

Mr. President, confronting painful, difficult but vital questions “is” who you are. Help us be the America we “ought” to be, that beacon of freedom and dignity that shines its light on the darkness of human history and exposes the vile crime of genocide.”

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Adam Schiff, BREAKING NEWS: Obama Wants Military Strike Against Syria, Obama, open letter

Glendale: Atrocity on exhibit in ‘Armenia: An Open Wound’ #ArmenianGenocide

April 21, 2016 By administrator

tn-gnp-photo-gallery-armenia-an-open-wound-gallery-at-brand-library-20160418By  Bradley Zint Contact Reporter,

Glendale city officials and community leaders recently unveiled an exhibition at the Brand Library and Art Center that explores the history of the Armenian people as well as the context and aftermath of the Armenian Genocide.

“Armenia: An Open Wound,” which opened Saturday to a crowd of about 500 attendees, runs Tuesdays through Saturdays until June 11. Admission is free.

The exhibition — presented by the city’s Library, Arts and Culture Department in partnership with the Armenian American Museum — takes between 30 to 45 minutes to walk through. It comes to Glendale after a one-year run in Mexico City’s Museum of Memory and Tolerance, where it was created.

Visitors start “Armenia: An Open Wound” in a room dedicated to the history and origins of Armenia. It includes a scale replica of Ani, a medieval Armenian community, now in ruins, in present-day Turkey.

The second area delves into the atrocities, including targeted massacres, committed against the Armenian people from approximately 1821 to 1918.

The subsequent section, called the Blood and Sand Memorial, includes a life-size photo of Tsitsernakaberd, an Armenian Genocide memorial erected in Yerevan. Hundreds of flowers were placed in front of the Tsitsernakaberd photo Saturday.

The center of the photo has also been cut out, allowing visitors to pass through it and into a separate room behind that transports them into the Deir ez-Zor desert in Syria. The room, which has dirt on the ground, features 360-degree photos of the barren landscape. Playing in the background is music featuring the duduk, an Armenian woodwind instrument.

The Deir ez-Zor scene commemorates and symbolizes the harsh journeys imposed upon the Armenian people, who were forced to leave their ancestral homeland, organizers say. It also shows how isolated they became and even where they died, hence the name “blood and sand,” said Tigranna Zakaryan, community outreach director for the Armenian American Museum.

“Armenia: An Open Wound ” will have personal meaning to almost every Armenian, added Zaven Kazazian, a member of the museum’s executive committee. Recalling the exhibition’s name, he said that chapter in Armenia’s history is still an “open wound” because the Turks have never admitted “that they committed these atrocities.”

Cathy Billings, senior library, arts and culture supervisor for the Brand Library, said the galleries have never shown an exhibition of such scale before. Walls had to be built quickly to create the narrative path in time for the opening on Saturday.

“It’s totally new for us,” she said.

“Armenia: An Open Wound” includes free special events on particular topics, the first of which will be from 7 to 9:30 p.m. on Thursday. Titled “Global Realities, Local Perspectives,” it will feature refugee-rights professionals talking about humanitarian assistance.

For more information about the exhibition, visit www.armenianamericanmuseum.org or call the Brand Library at (818) 548-2051.

The Brand Library and Art Center is located at 1601 W. Mountain St., Glendale.

—

Bradley Zint, bradley.zint@latimes.com

Twitter: @BradleyZint

—

ALSO:

Armenian Genocide documentary to premiere Thursday in Glendale

 

Copyright © 2016, Glendale News-Press

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenia, armenian genocide, atrocity, exhibit, open wonds

WSJ becoming Turkish denial propaganda machine runs massive ad denying Armenian genocide

April 21, 2016 By administrator

defaultWSJThe Wall Street Journal ran a full-page ad on Wednesday containing links to a Turkish project that denies the Armenian genocide – the 1915 massacre of 1.5 million people by Ottoman Turks. The newspaper says it accepts ads with “provocative viewpoints.”

The ad features the words “Truth=Peace” printed in large letters and shows a hand colored like the Turkish flag holding up a peace sign, while two other hands colored like the Russian and Armenian flags have their fingers crossed.

It also contains a link to the genocide-denial group FactCheckArmenia.com, which propagates claims that Armenians were killed during the First World War because they were “collectively guilty” of treason against the Ottoman Empire.

READ MORE: Armenian genocide: 130K march in LA to mark 100th anniversary (PHOTO, VIDEO) 

Moreover, it attempts to argue that fewer people were killed than is claimed, and that the Armenians started the conflict.

The WSJ ad caused outrage on Twitter and other social media platforms.

Adding to the controversy, the newspaper responded by saying it prints many “provocative” ads that may not represent the opinions of WSJ.

“We accept a wide range of advertisements, including those with provocative viewpoints. While we review ad copy for issues of taste, the varied and divergent views expressed belong to the advertisers,” the paper’s spokesperson said, as quoted by Gawker.

The group that paid for the ad promotes a pro-Turkey platform, with the goal of deflecting attention from the facts surrounding the genocide.

Shame on You Wall Street Journal Becoming another Tools in Hands of Turkish criminals denying #ArmenianGenocide @WSJ pic.twitter.com/wuUsb16yXC

— Wally Sarkeesian (@gagrulenet) April 21, 2016

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: armenian genocide, denying, Turkey, WSJ

Peter Balakian wins Pulitzer Prize for Armenian Genocide poetry anthology

April 19, 2016 By administrator

default-awardAmerican Armenian Author Peter Balakian won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry for Ozone Journal, which is about the Armenian Genocide.

The winners and finalists were revealed Monday during a live-streamed broadcast from Columbia University in New York.

“The prize goes to Ozone Journal by Peter Balakian,” announced Mike Pride, the administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes.

The title poem of Peter Balakian’s Ozone Journal is a sequence of fifty-four short sections, each a poem in itself, recounting the speaker’s memory of excavating the bones of Armenian genocide victims in the Syrian desert with a crew of television journalists in 2009. These memories spark others—the dissolution of his marriage, his life as a young single parent in Manhattan in the nineties, visits and conversations with a cousin dying of AIDS—creating a montage that has the feel of history as lived experience. Bookending this sequence are shorter lyrics that span times and locations, from Nairobi to the Native American villages of New Mexico. In the dynamic, sensual language of these poems, we are reminded that the history of atrocity, trauma, and forgetting is both global and ancient; but we are reminded, too, of the beauty and richness of culture and the resilience of love.

Ozone Journal creates inventive lyrical insight in a global age of danger and uncertainty.

Peter Balakian is the Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar Professor of the Humanities at Colgate University, in Madison County, New York. He is the author of seven books of poems and four prose works, including The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response, a New York Times best seller, and Black Dog of Fate, a memoir, winner of the PEN/Albrand Prize.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: armenian genocide, Peter-Balakian, Pulitzer prize

Turkey: Gulen-linked police chiefs to stand trial for Dink’s murder

April 18, 2016 By administrator

turkey.thumbFollowing a court’s approval to merge two cases, former police chiefs linked to the controversial Gülen Movement will stand side-by-side with the murder convicts of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink for the first time, the Daily Sabah reports. 
The police chiefs are accused of negligence and orchestrating a cover-up before and after the 2007 murder, which sparked public outrage.
Dink, the late editor-in-chief of Agos daily, was shot dead in front of his office in Istanbul by Ogün Samast, a 17-year-old teenager who claimed he shot Dink for his anti-Turkish views. The murder, initially considered to be committed by far-right nationalists, later turned out to be a larger plot, and several police intelligence officers were arrested for deliberately covering up intelligence on the murder plot. Moreover, several police chiefs indicted in the case are accused of links to the Gülen Movement, the umbrella term used to describe the Gülenist Terror Organization (FETÖ), which is behind two alleged coup attempts in 2013, according to prosecutors.
The suspects will appear before an Istanbul court tomorrow in the case mired with allegations of corruption after former prosecutors looking into the case claimed to cover the tracks of the Gülen-linked officers’ role in the murder. The hearings will continue for three days.
The Gulen Movement is accused of trying to shift blame for the murder onto others, including the Ergenekon, an alleged gang of generals, journalists and several prominent figures who were imprisoned after a trial conducted by Gülenist prosecutors. All defendants in the Ergenekon case were released years later, after investigations revealed they were imprisoned by prosecutors and judges close to the movement based on forged and tampered evidence.
The court had earlier accepted the indictment of 26 suspects in the Dink case. Suspects include former Intelligence Department directors of the Turkish National Police, Engin Dinç and Ramazan Akyürek, former intelligence director of the Istanbul Police, Ali Fuat Yılmazer, and intelligence officers Muhittin Zenit, Ercan Demir and Özkan Mumcu. Akyürek, who was police chief in Trabzon – the hometown of Samast and his alleged accomplice, Yasin Hayal – faces aggravated life sentence. He is charged with running a terrorist organization, homicide, forgery of official documents, destroying official documents and abuse of duty. Yılmazer faces life in prison for similar charges while other officers are subject to lesser sentences for negligence and causing manslaughter by negligence as well as hiding evidence. Akyürek was arrested in February 2015 upon orders from an Istanbul court, just one day after he was detained for questioning regarding the Dink murder, while Yılmazer was arrested earlier in a separate case involving the Gülenists.
The Supreme Court of Appeals ordered the merger of two separate cases in January, marking a legal victory for Dink’s family who sought to shed light on the officials’ role in the murder. The murder took place after Dink was warned by Istanbul authorities over his work. A local official testified to the court after the murder and countered allegations that Dink was threatened with death after running a story claiming a prominent Turkish figure was in fact an Armenian woman. The official said Dink was warned against “stirring public outrage.”
Dink, an outspoken critic of both the Turkish and Armenian stance toward the mass deaths of Armenians in 1915 – labeled as “genocide” by Armenia, a term rejected by Turkey – drew ire among hardline nationalists during his lifetime. His call for the resolution of the controversial issue led to numerous death threats before his murder. He also faced several lawsuits for “denigrating Turkishness,” an act constitutionally punishable with prison time, for his articles and editorials regarding the issue.
The Gulen Movement, led by U.S.-based retired preacher Fethullah Gülen, is accused of having infiltrated Turkey’s police departments and judiciaries as well as the higher echelons of the bureaucracy. Gülenists currently face a number of trials as the judiciary, which saw a purge of prosecutors and judges linked to the movement, stepped up efforts against FETÖ. A large number of the group’s members were arrested or wanted in multiple cases ranging from illegal wiretapping to conspiring to imprison critics of the movement, money laundering and defrauding the state. Gülen is the prime suspect in all cases as head of the FETÖ and rejects returning to Turkey from Pennsylvania where he resides while Turkey seeks to speed up his extradition process

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: chiefs, Gülen-linked, Hrant dink, police, Trial, Turkey

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