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Three found slaughtered at Bible firm in Turkey

ISTANBUL -- In a gruesome attack that sent shockwaves through Turkey's tiny Christian community, assailants slit the throats of three men yesterday at a publishing house that distributes Bibles and other Christian literature.

Five youths were detained at the scene in the conservative eastern city of Malatya, Turkish authorities said. One news report said the suspects carried notes indicating their motive was right-wing nationalism.

Turkey's sometimes-hostile stance toward its religious and ethnic minorities has been a persistent source of concern to Western governments as the country presses ahead with its campaign for entry into the European Union.

While the government officially preaches tolerance, it historically has failed to rein in virulent ultranationalist groups. Authorities were accused of ignoring repeated death threats against Hrant Dink, an ethnic Armenian newspaper editor who was gunned down outside his offices in Istanbul in January. Prosecutors later said a teenager confessed to the shooting.

At the Zirve publishing house in Malatya's city center, police discovered the three victims bound hand and foot, tied to chairs with their throats cut. Two already were dead; the third died at the hospital.

All were believed to have been workers at the publishing house. One of the dead men had German citizenship, the German Embassy confirmed.

Christians make up less than 1 percent of the population of 70 million in this officially secular but overwhelmingly Muslim country. However, they are regarded with deep suspicion by right-wing groups, particularly if they are seen to be involved in proselytizing.

Malatya, about 500 miles southeast of Istanbul, has long been considered a stronghold of Turkish nationalism, laced with anti-Christian sentiment. Mehmet Ali Agca, who tried to assassinate Pope John Paul II in 1981, was from the city.

One of the five youths in custody suffered serious head injuries when he jumped from a third-story window of the publishing house as police arrived. Officers were summoned by visitors who worried when they received no answer to their knocks. 

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