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The Economist - 19 Oct 06 - Turkey & the Armenia s: a Prize Affair

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  • The Economist - 19 Oct 06 - Turkey & the Armenia s: a Prize Affair

    Turkey and the Armenians

    A prize affair

    Oct 19th 2006 | ISTANBUL
    > > From The Economist print edition


    Orhan Pamuk, the French parliament and the Armenian massacres

    WAS it for his writing or his commentary? The question has consumed
    the country since Orhan Pamuk became the first Turk to win the
    Nobel prize for literature (or indeed any Nobel). The comments,
    about the mass slaughter of Armenians by the Ottoman Turks, led last
    year to Mr Pamuk's prosecution on charges of insulting the "Turkish
    identity". The charges were later dropped on a technicality, but not
    before they had attracted a storm of international criticism.

    Ascribing to him the Byzantine wiles displayed by some of his
    characters, Mr Pamuk's enemies are now saying that he engineered his
    own trial so as to win the Nobel. Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the mildly
    Islamist prime minister, urged fellow Turks to "put aside polemics"
    and congratulate Mr Pamuk, but the (pro-secular) president remained
    pointedly silent.

    The novelist's detractors were given a boost, hours before the
    award was announced, by the French National Assembly, when it voted
    overwhelmingly for a bill to criminalise denial that the Armenians
    were victims of a genocide. The bill is unlikely to become law,
    but it still sparked a wave of anti-French demonstrations and vows
    that France would somehow be made to "pay" for its misdeeds. Why
    not boot out some 70,000 illegal workers from neighbouring Armenia,
    suggested Yasar Yakis, a former minister from the ruling AK party?

    The European Union enlargement commissioner, Olli Rehn, said
    that the French bill "instead of opening up the debate [on the
    Armenians in Turkey] would rather close it down." Mesrob Mutafyan,
    the Armenian Orthodox patriarch in Istanbul, voiced fears that his
    80,000-member flock might now become targets for ultra-nationalist
    vigilantes. Happily, no Armenian has been hurt (or deported) so
    far. Nor have efforts to break the ice between ordinary Turks and
    Armenians stopped-an exhibition by Turkish and Armenian photographers
    depicting daily life in Istanbul and Yerevan is to open soon.

    There may even be a silver lining to the French cloud. Basking on
    the moral high ground, Mr Erdogan said he would not be trapped into
    responding to France's "assault on free speech" in kind. The justice
    minister, Cemil Cicek, is hinting that Turkey's article 301, under
    which Mr Pamuk and scores of fellow writers and academics have been
    prosecuted, may be scrapped. If it is, Turkey's EU hopes would be
    resuscitated-and future award-winning novelists could then claim to
    have been judged solely by their works, not their deeds.

    http://www.economist.com/world/europe/disp laystory.cfm?story_id=8058022
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