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Orhan Pamuk Is No Traitor: Informed Sources

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  • Orhan Pamuk Is No Traitor: Informed Sources

    ORHAN PAMUK IS NO TRAITOR: INFORMED SOURCES

    National Post (Canada)
    September 16, 2005 Friday
    National Edition

    source The Spectator

    The following editorial appeared in Britain's Spectator magazine on
    Sept. 10.

    Over the past years, The Spectator has been a staunch defender of
    Turkey and its right to join the European Union, negotiations for which
    begin on Oct. 3. We have praised its economy, its founder-membership
    of Nato and condemned the many Turkophobes within the EU.

    A rarity among nations with Muslim majorities, it holds proper
    elections and, for the most part, maintains a legal system that most in
    the West would regard as fair. It has 70 million industrious citizens
    who want to trade on equal terms.

    It would be a tragedy, therefore, if Turkish membership of the
    EU were to be jeopardized by Turkey's ugly treatment of its most
    prominent novelist, Orhan Pamuk. Last week, Mr. Pamuk was charged
    under Article 301/1 of the Turkish penal code, which makes it an
    offence to insult the Republic of Turkey, punishable with between
    six months and three years imprisonment -- increased by a third if
    the offence was committed abroad.

    Mr. Pamuk's crime was to make reference, in an interview with Swiss
    newspaper Tagesanzeiger in February, to Turkey's ethnic cleansing
    of Armenians between 1915 and 1917 and to its ill-treatment of Kurds
    since 1984. "Thirty thousand Kurds and a million Armenians were killed
    in these lands and nobody but me dares to talk about it," he said.

    It goes without saying that jailing people for raising such issues is
    unacceptable in a modern democracy. Orhan Pamuk is no traitor. On the
    contrary, he is seen in the literary world as a great ambassador for
    his homeland, whose work shows a deep love of his country and who has
    been able to straddle the gap between East and West. He simply wishes
    to be free to discuss a couple of dark episodes in Turkey's history.

    To give it some credit, the Turkish government does not entirely deny
    that a large number of Armenians came to a bad end around 1915. The
    prime minister, Tayyip Erdogan, recently announced his desire to
    establish a commission of historians to judge whether or not genocide
    took place. Yet no democracy should seek to legislate in favour of
    one official version of history.

    Rather, it should tolerate a free market in ideas, knowing that it is
    lively debate which best ensures that the truth eventually seeps out.

    Orhan Pamuk's accusations of the scale of Turkish maltreatment of
    Armenians and Kurds are supported by eyewitness accounts.

    An American diplomat filed a report at the time speaking of Ottoman
    soldiers, aided by Kurdish tribesmen, "sweeping the countryside,
    massacring men, women and children and burning their homes. Babies were
    shot in their mothers' arms, small children were horribly mutilated,
    women were stripped and beaten." Pamuk's accusations are supported,
    too, by Halil Berktay, a professor at Sabanci University, who puts
    the numbers of dead at between 800,000 and one million.

    But even if Pamuk's charges were nonsense, it would be no excuse for
    jailing him. A confident nation has no need to suppress free speech,
    knowing that anyone who makes false accusations against their country's
    past for political reasons will rapidly be crushed beneath the weight
    of counter-evidence.

    Admittedly, Turkey's problem over Armenia and the Kurds is not limited
    to the government: 80% of respondents to a recent opinion poll said
    they could do without EU membership if it meant having to admit to
    past genocide. But if Turkey wants to join the EU, and become a full
    member of the wider club of Western democracies, it simply has to
    face up to its past, and to its present democratic failings. Article
    301/1 of its penal code must go.
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