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Dyer: A Genocide By Any Other Name Would Still Stink

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  • Dyer: A Genocide By Any Other Name Would Still Stink

    DYER: A GENOCIDE BY ANY OTHER NAME WOULD STILL STINK

    VUE Weekly, Canada
    Oct 19 2006

    Words matter. The Holocaust of the European Jews during the Second
    World War was a genocide. The mass deportation of Chechens from their
    Caucasian homeland during the same war was a crime but not a genocide,
    even though half of them died, because Moscow's aim was to keep them
    from collaborating with German troops who were nearing Chechnya, not
    to exterminate them. Which brings us to the far more controversial
    case of the Armenians and the Turks.

    On Oct 12, the French parliament passed a law declaring that anyone
    who denies that the mass murder of Armenians in eastern Turkey in
    1915-17 was a genocide will face a year in prison. But the French
    foreign ministry called the law "unnecessary and untimely," and
    President Jacques Chirac telephoned Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyib Erdogan to apologize.

    Why would the conservative majority in the French parliament
    deliberately set out to annoy the Turks, knowing that the law would
    eventually be vetoed by the president? Because they hope to provoke a
    nationalist backlash in Turkey that would further damage that country's
    already difficult relationship with the European Union.

    French public opinion is already in a xenophobic mood over the last
    expansion of the EU, with folk-tales of "Polish plumbers" working for
    peanuts and stealing the jobs of honest French workers causing outrage,
    especially among right-wing voters who never much liked foreigners
    anyway. The prospect of 80 million Turks-Muslim Turks-joining the
    European Union, even if it is at least 10 years away, is enough to
    make their blood boil.

    So a big row with Turkey should attract lots of votes to the right's
    presidential candidate in next May's election, who is likely to be
    none other than current prime minister Nicolas Sarkozy-who announced
    last month that Turkey should never be allowed to join the EU: "We
    have to say who is European and who isn't. It's no longer possible to
    leave this question open." The new law is not really about Armenians
    or Turks. It's about the French election.

    Meanwhile, in Turkey, anti-EU nationalists have their own game
    underway. While Turkey was busy amending its penal code to make it
    conform to EU standards over the past few years, hard-line lawyers and
    bureaucrats smuggled in a new law, Article 301, which provides severe
    penalties for "insulting Turkishness." In practice, that mainly means
    trying to ban public discussion of the Armenian massacres, and some 70
    prosecutions have already been brought by the ultra-right-wing Union of
    Lawyers against Turkish authors, journalists and other public figures.

    For several generations the Turkish government flatly denied any guilt
    for the Armenian massacres, insisting that they didn't happen-and,
    if they did, it was the Armenians' own fault for rebelling against
    the Turkish state in wartime. Latterly, a new generation of Turkish
    intellectuals has been saying that a million or more Armenians did
    die in the mass deportations from eastern Anatolia, and that Turkey
    needs to admit its guilt and apologize-though most still refuse to
    call it a genocide, as that would put it in the same category as the
    Jewish Holocaust.

    Israel, too, refuses to use the term "genocide" for the Armenian
    massacres, on the grounds that there was some provocation (Armenian
    revolutionaries conspired with both Britain and Russia in 1914-15
    to launch local uprisings in support of their planned invasions
    of Turkey), and that the Turkish state's actions, though brutal,
    illegal and immoral, were not premeditated. Most Armenians, of course,
    desperately want the label "genocide" to be applied to their ancestors'
    suffering, since they feel that any other term demotes it to a lower
    rank of tragedy. But there is room for dialogue and even reconciliation
    here, if people can get past the issue of nomenclature.

    The prosecutions for "insulting Turkishness"-even against Turkey's
    greatest living novelist, Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk-are not just
    an attempt to stifle this dialogue among Turks, or between Turks and
    Armenians. The ultra-nationalists also want to derail the negotiations
    for EU membership by painting Turkey as an authoritarian and intolerant
    state that does not belong in Europe. They are, in effect, Sarkozy's
    objective allies.

    But Prime Minister Erdogan will probably repeal Article 301 once
    next year's elections are past. France's law, which requires people
    to discuss the Armenian massacres in precisely the terms that 301
    bans, will probably be vetoed by Chirac. And Turkey's best-known
    Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink, who has already been prosecuted
    several times under 301, has just announced that he will go to France
    "to protest against this madness and violate the (new) law ... And
    I will commit the crime to be prosecuted there, so that these two
    irrational mentalities can race to put me into jail."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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