No weapon forged against you will prevail, and you will
refute every tongue that accuses you. This is the heritage of the servants of
the LORD, and this is their vindication from me, declares the LORD.
Isaiah
54:17
3 killed in attack on Christian publishing house in Turkey
The Associated Press
April 18, 2007
ISTANBUL, Turkey: Assailants killed three people Wednesday at a
publishing house that distributed Bibles, in the latest attack apparently
targeting Turkey's small Christian minority.
The three victims were found with their throats slit and their
hands and legs bound at the Zirve publishing house in Malatya, a city in
eastern central Turkey, local Gov. Ibrahim Dasoz said. One was found still
alive, and was taken to the hospital but later died, he said.
Two of the victims were Turkish, and one was a German who had
lived in Malatya since 2003, Dasoz said. The German ambassador to Turkey said
he was shocked by the attack.
"Even if the exact circumstances of the crime are not yet
known, I most strongly condemn this brutal crime," Ambassador Eckart Cuntz
said in a statement. The government-run Anatolia news agency identified the
German as 46-year-old Tilman Ekkehart Geske.
Police detained four suspects, and believe the man who jumped from
the window was one of the attackers and leapt out to avoid arrest, according to
the Malatya governor, Dasoz. Anatolia said all five suspects aged 19 and 20
were preparing for the university entrance exam and were friends from the same
students' residence. They were all carrying a letter that read: "We five
are brothers. We are going to our deaths. We may not return," according to
Anatolia.
Malatya is known as a hotbed of nationalists, and is also the
hometown of Mehmet Ali Agca, who shot Pope John Paul II in 1981.
The Zirve publishing house has been the site of previous protests
by nationalists accusing it of proselytizing in this 99-percent Muslim but
secular country, Dogan news agency reported.
Zirve's general manager told CNN-Turk that his employees had
recently been threatened. "We know that they have been receiving some
threats," Hamza Ozant said, but could not say who made the threats.
A group of 150 lit candles and unfolded a banner that read
"We are all Christians" in downtown Istanbul to protest at the
attack. Interior Minister Abdulkadir Aksu condemned the attack and said he
viewed it as an assault on "peace, the environment of trust, stability and
tolerance" in the country.
The manner in which the victims were bound suggested the attack
could have been the work of a local Islamic militant group, commentators said,
and CNN-Turk television reported that police were investigating the possible
involvement of Turkish Hezbollah a Kurdish Islamic organization that aims to
form a Muslim state in Turkey's Kurdish-dominated southeast.
Turkish Hezbollah which has been known to "hog-tie"
its victims while torturing them takes its name from the Lebanon-based
Hezbollah, but has no formal links to it. Turkish authorities recently said
they were witnessing an increase in the group's activities.
Video footage broadcast on the private NTV news channel showed
police tackling one man outside the publishing house, and rescue workers
putting another man in a neck brace onto a stretcher.
Attacks have become more common against members of Turkey's
Christian community, which comprises less than 1 percent of the population, and
there have been concerns about rising nationalism and hostility toward
non-Muslims.
In February 2006, a Turkish teenager shot a Catholic priest dead
as he prayed in his church, and two other Catholic priests were attacked later
that year. A November visit by Pope Benedict XVI was greeted by several
nonviolent protests. Earlier this year, a suspected nationalist killed Armenian
Christian editor Hrant Dink.
"These are fanatics who continue to be present in Turkey and
who at a moment's notice emerge with these acts of absurd violence,"
Monsignor Luigi Padovese, the Vatican representative in Turkey, was quoted as
saying by Italian news agency ANSA.
"Unfortunately the situation is very difficult and dangerous,
but the Catholic Church continues to work as always," Padovese said.
"However, (Turkish) authorities have the feeling that something very
dangerous is moving in Turkey."
Constantinople modern-day Istanbul was the Christian Byzantine
capital for more than 1,000 years until it fell to Muslim forces in 1453 and
became the seat of the Muslim Ottoman Empire.
Of Turkey's 70 million people today, only about 65,000 are
Armenian Orthodox Christians, 20,000 are Roman Catholic and 3,500 are
Protestant mostly converts from Islam. Another 2,000 are Greek Orthodox Christians.