Number 75 | May 4, 2009
On this day in 1982, a gunman murdered Turkish Honorary Consul General Orhan Gunduz in Boston, while he was waiting in his automobile in rush-hour traffic. An Armenian terrorist organization, Justice Commandos against Armenian Genocide (JCAG) claimed responsibility. Orhan Gunduz was not a career diplomat, but held an honorary title and was a member of the Turkish American community. The murder occurred six weeks after Mr. Gunduz was wounded in a bomb attack at his gift shop, before which JCAG threatened Mr. Gunduz to either resign as Honorary Consul or be executed. To help solve the murder of Orhan Gunduz, local television and newspapers utilized a composite drawing based on information provided by a witness. When the witness was subsequently gunned-down, all community efforts to help apprehend the killers came to a halt. The murder of Orhan Gunduz remains unsolved.
The killing spree by Armenian terrorist organizations began nine years before the assassination of Mr.Gunduz, on January 27, 1973 in Los Angeles. Turkish Consul General to Los Angeles Mehmet Baydar and Vice Consul Bahadir Demir were killed in cold blood by an Armenian terrorist named Kourken Yanikian at the Baltimore Hotel in Santa Barbara. Yanikian was arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment. He was paroled by California Governor George Deukmejian, of Armenian descent, after serving less than 11 years in prison for two murders. The anniversary of this killing was “marked” by Armenian terrorists on January 28, 1982 with the murder of Turkish Consul General to Los Angeles Kemal Arikan, as he was waiting at an intersection in his car.
The terror campaign of Armenian organizations worldwide continued until 1995 with a total of 239 acts of terror carried out by Armenian terrorists in 38 cities and 21 countries. 70 people were murdered, mainly Turkish diplomats and their family members, were murdered, over 500 were wounded in these attacks.
In 1999, Mourad Topalian, the then chairman of the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), was indicted by a grand jury in Ohio on charges of participating in the 1980 bombing of the Turkish Mission in New York. Topalian was sentenced in 2001 to 37 months in prison for storing stolen explosives, which prosecutors insisted were used in the Turkish Mission bombing, and owning two machine guns. When the federal charges were filed, Topalian resigned from his post at the ANCA, but continued to receive support from Armenian Americans nationwide for his legal defense fund.