Şarık Arıyak

Şarık Arıyak (3 March 1930 – 17 December 1980) was a Turkish diplomat killed by an organization named Justice Commandos of the Armenian Genocide in Sydney, Australia.

Tombstone of Arıyak. It reads "He loved all human beings".

Early life

Şarık Arıyak was born on 3 March 1930 in İstanbul, Turkey. After finishing Sivas High School and Faculty of Political Science of Ankara University he traveled to Switzerland for further studies at the University of Lausanne. He served in the Ministry of Finance and then he transferred to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1959. In 1969 he married to Demet Gülöz. During his youth he played football in Gençlerbirliği S.K.. He was also a 400 metres track runner.[1]

Professional life

In the Ministry of Foreign Affairs he served in the NATO department. Later he served in the embassies in Roma and Seoul. Next he was appointed as the chief secretary of Paris embassy. In 1975 he returned home to serve in the Culture department of the ministry. On 30 November 1978 he was appointed as the consul general in Sydney.[1]

Assassination

On 17 December 1980 at 9:45am local time, Arıyak was assassinated by two unknown men while he was about to leave his home for his office. The men first shot his bodyguard, Engin Sever, and then shot Arıyak. Arıyak died on the scene and Sever died soon after at a hospital. A secret organization, the Justice Commandos of the Armenian Genocide, claimed responsibility for the assassination via telephone messages. Arıyak was survived by his wife and his 8-year-old daughter, who both were the witnesses to the assassination.

The killers were not apprehended. On 17 December 2019 it was announced that New South Wales Joint Counter Terrorism Team established Strike Force Esslemont to re-investigate the murders. The reward for information that leads to an arrest and conviction was increased from $250,000 to $1 million, which is the first ever million-dollar reward offered in Australia for an act of terrorism.[2]

Legacy

A street in İstanbul was named after Şarık Arıyak[3]

gollark: I don't see why I would want that, and that's not listed, but I imagine you could implement it.
gollark: <@201096871341588480> Actually, I might as well just link you the docs, this lists all the stuff it can do in MicroPython: https://microbit-micropython.readthedocs.io/en/v1.0.1/microbit_micropython_api.html
gollark: Help make the communist revolution more inevitable and use "comrades"!
gollark: Built-in, text display (on a 5x5 LED matrix...), buttons, image handling (for said 5x5 LED matrix), GPIO pin access, music and also raw audio (external speaker needed, I have one), speech synthesis (???), random numbers, accelerometer access/gesture control, compass/magnetometer access, persistent data storage, UART, SPI, and radio access.
gollark: Well, yes.

See also

References

  1. Bilal Şimşir: Şehit Diplomatlarımız, Bilgi yayınevi, İstanbul, Vol 1, ISBN 975-494-925-5 pp.359-360
  2. "$1m reward for Turkish diplomat's killing in Sydney". The Sydney Morning Herald. 17 December 2019. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
  3. İstanbul map page
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