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Amsterdam: Genocide Denial Causes Dutch Election Upset

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  • Amsterdam: Genocide Denial Causes Dutch Election Upset

    GENOCIDE DENIAL CAUSES DUTCH ELECTION UPSET
    by Andy Clark

    Radio Netherlands, Netherlands
    Sept 27 2006

    It might seem a little strange but the Armenian genocide of 1915 has
    become an issue in the run up to the Dutch elections. The two leading
    parties in the opinion polls have kicked out prospective MPs because
    they deny that the genocide took place. The candidates, one from the
    opposition Labour Party and two from the biggest coalition party -
    the Christian Democrat CDA - are Dutch/Turkish politicians.

    It made the headlines after questions were raised by the Armenian
    community in the Netherlands when the names of the candidates were
    made public on the party lists for the November elections, and a
    heated discussion soon followed.

    Official policy The candidates in question had clearly stated in the
    past that, in their view, the genocide of Armenians in Turkey in 1915
    had not taken place. This view is contrary to the official policy of
    the Dutch government and of the parties themselves.

    Tineke Huizinga is from the Christian Union - a small party in the
    parliament which introduced an initiative in 2004 saying that the
    government has to push for recognition of the genocide in Turkey as
    part of the negotiations for Turkey's desired accession to the EU.

    That initiative was unanimously accepted. Ms Huzinga explains the
    official Dutch position:

    "More than one and a half million people were murdered during the
    time of World War I by Turkey and this was a genocide and you can
    absolutely compare this with the Holocaust."

    Never took place It was a clash with this position that brought the CDA
    candidates Ayhan Tonca, Osman Elamci and Labour Party candidate Erdinc
    Sacan into problems with their parties. Ayhan Tonca has constantly
    denied the genocide occurred:

    "The genocide that people talk about never took place."

    Although he doesn't deny that hundreds of thousands of people died,
    he argues that there needs to be further investigation to see if the
    killings were consciously carried out by the Turkish government at that
    time. Deliberate and conscious persecution would constitute genocide.

    Newspaper interview His explanation was not in line with the
    recognition of genocide called for by his party, and events that
    followed the initial uproar made things even harder for the CDA to
    accept. Under pressure following the discussion in the Dutch media,
    the two CDA candidates signed a declaration saying they had changed
    their minds and would now recognise the genocide. But then followed
    an interview with a Turkish newspaper in which they repeated their
    original denials - and this left the CDA with little choice but to
    remove them from the list of candidates.

    The Labour Party decided to scrap its candidate from the list after he
    refused to stand by the official party policy recognising the genocide.

    Naive Experts accuse the parties of being somewhat naive in not
    carrying out more thorough checks before putting the candidates up
    for election. Professor of Turkish studies at Leiden University Erik
    Jan Zurcher says the parties were so anxious to have ethnic minority
    candidates on their lists that they didn't carry out the checks.

    In Turkey itself it is official policy to deny the genocide and those
    saying it did take place are liable to prosecution. Just this week
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink made it known that he is being
    prosecuted for the second time for saying that the genocide took place.
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