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  • Turkey in denial

    Fresno Bee
    Sept 15 2005
    X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
    X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 -- ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

    Turkey in denial
    Bid to join European Union entangled in genocide dispute.

    (Updated Thursday, September 15, 2005, 5:55 AM)

    For nearly a century debate has roiled over what the Turkish
    government and most Turks call a human tragedy brought on by the
    chaos of World War I and what most of the world - including The Bee -
    call the Armenian genocide.

    Now the issue has become enmeshed in Turkey's faltering effort to
    join the European Union. How the conflict turns out is important -
    for Turkish-Armenian relations and for the future of Turkey, a
    country that straddles Europe and the Middle East.

    Turkish officialdom has always denied that forces of the collapsing
    Ottoman Empire sought to exterminate Turkish Armenians starting in
    1915, when ethnic Armenians say the Turks killed as many as 1.5
    million Armenians over eight years. Turkish officials agree that
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians died, but say that disease, famine
    and exposure, as well as fighting caused by Armenian guerrilla raids
    against retreating Turkish troops, were the primary causes.

    There matters stood until last spring, when Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan invited foreign scholars to study Ottoman
    archives to determine what really happened.

    That encouraging gesture has had little hopeful result. Scholars have
    run afoul of Turkish officials and military leaders, who forced
    cancellation of a conference. An ethnic Armenian publisher has been
    accused of defaming Turkey by calling himself "an Armenian of
    Turkey," and a prominent Turkish novelist faces a similar charge for
    saying in an interview that Turks killed 1million Armenians and, more
    recently, 30,000 Turkish Kurds in a guerrilla war, and that "no one
    but me dares to talk about it."

    The timing of these charges - just weeks before negotiations are to
    begin on Turkey's application to join the EU - has raised suspicion,
    and charges that some nationalist elements, already angered by
    growing European opposition to Turkish EU membership, are trying to
    sabotage the process. The criminal charges fly in the face of
    extensive changes in Turkish law, including abolition of the death
    penalty and ending a ban on speaking Kurdish, to satisfy EU
    requirements for membership. France opposes Turkey joining, and if
    the Christian Democrats win Germany's election, another prominent
    negative voice would be added.

    What's at stake goes well beyond the Armenian issue, coming as
    millions of Europeans - even in such liberal bastions as the
    Netherlands - are rethinking their traditional welcome to immigrants.
    And Muslims rank highest in this reassessment.

    Turkey, with an overwhelmingly Muslim population but a staunchly
    secular political system, is seen by many as a bridge between the
    Christian West and the Muslim East. But as Europe's welcome mat is
    pulled away, many Turks resent what they regard as rising religious
    and cultural bigotry among Europeans.

    Although it's hard to envision Turkey's secular leaders rejecting the
    West and embracing Islamic tradition, the roadblocks in the path of
    Armenian-Turkish reconciliation raise again the question of whether
    Turkey and Europe can ever share a common home.

    There's a simple solution, though it would by no means be easy:
    Turkey should simply recognize and acknowledge the past. That would
    both smooth Turkey's path toward EU membership, and begin to right a
    historic wrong.
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