Monday, June 7, 2010
Freedom Flotilla: The Rachel Corrie
The Lone Ship of the Freedom Flotilla: The Rachel Corrie MV Continues to Sail Towards Gaza in Defiance of Israeli Threats
Friday, June 4, 2010
Furkan Dogan 19-years Old by the Israelis Abroad Rescue Ship Mavi Marmara to Gaza
A 19-year-old man with dual U.S.-Turkish citizenship was among the nine people killed in the Israeli raid on an aid flotilla in the eastern Mediterranean, the State Department said Thursday. That potentially complicates the Obama administration's attempts to remain neutral in the crisis.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/06/03/furkan-dogan-us-citizen-k_n_599173.html
Furkan Doğan | |
---|---|
Born | 20 October 1991 Troy, New York |
Died | 31 May 2010 (aged 18) near Ashdod, Israel (killed in theGaza flotilla raid) |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Activist |
Known for | İHH activity |
Home town | Kayseri |
Parents | Ahmet Doğan |
Furkan Doğan (20 October 1991[1] – 31 May 2010) was a Turkish American who was residing in Turkey permanently.[2] He was the youngest person killed by the IDF on the MV Mavi Marmara, in the Gaza flotilla raid and became a political symbol after his death
Early life[edit]
Furkan Doğan was born to ethnic Turkish parents in Troy, New York[5][6] in the United States and moved to Turkey at the age of two.[7]
He was a high school student at Kayseri Özel Hisarcıklıoğlu Fen Lisesi inKayseri, Turkey.[8][9][10] He wanted to study medicine.[11] He had planned to visit New York in the summer of 2010.[12]
His father, Ahmet Doğan, who graduated from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institutewith an MBA in accounting, is an assistant professor of accounting at Erciyes University.[5][13]
Gaza flotilla and Doğan's death[edit]
Dogan was not intensely interested in politics, and his participation in the Gaza Freedom Flotilla, was volunteered by himself.[11] He was killed in the Gaza flotilla raid.[14] Doğan's father said that "Furkan was a US citizen only and he never thought that he would be killed since he was an American citizen."[2] In his final diary entry written on the ship, he wrote about the beauty of martyrdom:
"It is the last hours to martyrdom, insha'Allah. I am wondering if there is a more beautiful thing. The more beautiful thing is only my mother, but I'm not sure. The comparison is very difficult. Martyrdom or my mother? Now, the hall has been evacuated. So far people were not serious, but they have become serious recently."[15]
An autopsy revealed he had suffered five gunshot wounds, to the nose, back, back of the head, left leg, and left ankle,[18] at a distance of 45 centimeters. A UNHCR concluded he was also shot at after he fell wounded on the floor.[11] He was shot when he was filming the events in the ship.[19] A video from İHH which was posted in many websites including haber7 claims to show a person being shot by IDF soldiers. It is claimed that the person shot was Doğan by haber7.[20] This video was also posted at the on-line news collective This Can't Be Happening: [3]
The US alleges the autopsy report was never handed over to US authorities despite repeated requests to that effect.[21]
Reactions to his death[edit]
On 3 June 2010, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton confirmed his death and said U.S. officials had met with Doğan's father to express their condolences.[22] Clinton said,
U.S. authorities in Turkey have offered U.S. consular services.[25][26] His funeral service was held at the Fatih Mosque inIstanbul on 3 June 2010[27]
The American Muslims for Palestine (AMP) condemned the attack.[28] Ray McGovern questioned Israel's killing of Americans without being held accountable.[29] The Christian Science Monitor reported that his US citizenship may make it difficult to avoid a diplomatic confrontation between the US and Israel.[30]
The Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, criticized the USA Government for being silent after Doğan's death. He asked: "Why is his death not followed by the USA, is it because of his Turkish origin?"[31]
Center for Constitutional Rights lawsuit[edit]
In May 2011, the Center for Constitutional Rights filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the U.S. government to release documents related to its knowledge and role in the attack, which it has thus far blocked.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Furkan_Do%C4%9Fan
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