Turkey remembers attaché assassinated by Armenian terror group in 1982
Bora Suelkan was shot in front of his house in Bulgarian Black Sea port city of Burgas.
Turkey on Saturday remembered attaché Bora Suelkan, who was assassinated by an Armenian terror group in 1982.
"We remember with respect our martyr Bora Suelkan, Administrative Attaché of the Turkish Consulate General in Burgas, assassinated in the heinous attack by the Armenian terrorist organization JCAG on 9 September 1982," the Foreign Ministry said on X.
Suelkan was shot from close range with three bullets on Sept. 9, 1982, in front of his house in the Bulgarian Black Sea port city.
The attack was just one of the assassinations of Turkish diplomats and family members around the world by Armenian terror groups ASALA (Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia) and JCAG (Justice Commandos of the Armenian Genocide).
Since the 1970s, Armenian terror groups have killed 31 Turkish diplomats and family members.
ASALA, founded in 1975, was the first Armenian terror group to wage war against Turkey, and the JCAG was founded the same year in Beirut.
ASALA not only targeted Turkey but also other countries and became infamous for a 1975 bomb attack on the Beirut office of the World Council of Churches.
The JCAG, which claimed that it got support from the Armenian diaspora rather than foreign partners, only targeted Turkey because it believed that attacking other countries would damage the so-called "Armenian struggle."
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