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It is Turkey's turn to recognize

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  • It is Turkey's turn to recognize

    It is Turkey's turn to recognize

    Yerkir/arm
    May 06, 2005

    Recently, Poland's parliament -- the Sejm -- recognized the 1915
    Armenian Genocide, adding to the list of the European Union countries
    to recognize the Genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire: Poland
    followed those Cyprus, Greece, France, Belgium, the Netherlands,
    Sweden, Italy and Slovakia.

    Presently, the Hungarian and German parliaments are discussing the
    issue of the Armenian Genocide, and in case, the White House calls the
    Armenian killings genocide, the Turkish policy of denial would
    register its final failure.

    However, instead of getting on the path of reviewing its history,
    Ankara organizes parliamentary hearings, and the state-controlled
    television station TRT1 devotes its prime time to the distortion and
    denial of the Armenian Genocide.

    The crime of genocide has been accompanying the humankind throughout
    its entire history: ancient and medieval conquerors would boast
    massive massacres and victims in the territories they conquered.

    The Ottoman Empire was not an exception, which, according to Turkish
    scholar Ismail Metin, for centuries maintained its authority "by
    threatening nations and carrying out extensive killings." In the late
    19th century and the early 20th century, along with the development of
    the international humanitarian law, states began to attempt to hide
    the crimes against humanity they were committing.

    The development of the international humanitarian law, establishment
    of the principles of the human rights and freedoms put the states in
    the position of losing sovereignty before their own citizens,
    according to the late medieval founder of the international
    humanitarian law Hugo Grocius. In this context, the international
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide, including the recognition by
    Turkey itself, is just a matter of time. Today, Turkey has found
    itself in a difficult situation in terms of foreign policy.

    The claims of the analytical centers serving that country's foreign
    ministry that the Turkish government has succeeded in establishing a
    "peaceful co-existence" zone with the neighboring countries except for
    Armenia have actually evaporated. The policy of buying time through
    establishment of various commissions is merely symptoms of
    nervousness.
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