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ANKARA: International law should decide on the controversial Armenia

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  • ANKARA: International law should decide on the controversial Armenia

    International law should decide on the controversial Armenian problem
    By Senem Caglayan

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    May 7 2005

    In recent weeks the controversial Armenian problem has cast a long
    shadow over Ankara's foreign and domestic debates, especially those
    between Turkey and Armenia.

    The main goal of the Armenians' lobbying efforts is to gain political
    recognition of their claims. Although they know that political
    recognition of the so-called genocide claims by various states
    worldwide carries no legal effect, they consider this recognition
    prestigious since they attribute a symbolic meaning to the issue.

    But "genocide" is an international law term, and its chargeable
    offenses are presented in the 1948 United Nations International
    Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
    The convention defines "genocide" as an act of partial or total
    annihilation of a national, ethnic, or religious group. The convention
    also says that rather than states, the persons that committed this
    crime could be accused and punished. The convention can only be applied
    to cases which occurred after it was put into force. Therefore,
    since it was put into force in 1948, past events do not fall under
    its purview and since it can only be applied to persons, not states,
    it is clear that it has no force for events in the closing days of
    World War I.

    Therefore, in order to succeed in heading off recognition of the
    Armenian claims, Ankara should carry the issue to a legal basis
    instead of entering into a political debate with other states or
    applying Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's suggestion of
    establishing a "joint commission" of Armenian and Turkish historians
    to investigate the controversial issue. There are a number of reasons
    for this.

    Firstly, political discussions can do nothing better than eroding
    bilateral relations and escalating the tensions between Turkey and
    Armenia. Secondly, even if historians of the two states were to meet,
    they could neither reach a sound conclusion nor could they find
    any evidence that settles the "genocide" issue one way or another,
    since these historians will interpret the documents and archives
    differently. We should keep in mind that perception of history varies
    according to the interpretation of events by the historians.
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