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NRC: Genocide is genocide

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  • NRC: Genocide is genocide

    Genocide is genocide

    NRC Handelsblad (Dutch national newspaper)
    28 september 2006

    The CDA (Christian Democratic Appeal) and the PvdA (Dutch Labor Party) were
    not aware of what it meant to put Dutch Turkish candidates on their
    draftlist who deny the genocide committed against roughly one million
    Armenians. The Armenian Genocide of 1915 and the late nineteenth century
    seems like an old, forgotten issue, but it is not. The massacre is part of
    the traumatic past of the Armenians around the world, inclucing those in the
    Netherlands. In Turkey, people have no understanding for this. In Turkey,
    people are still persecuted for writing texts or commenting on the Armenian
    genocide, among them writers Orhan Pamuk and recently Elif Shafak.
    Fortunately, Pamuk and Shafak were not convicted.

    If Dutch politicians affiliated with the larger parties would begin to doubt
    the genocide, they would in essence support the reactionary powers at play
    in Turkey. Dutch Turkish politicians should choose who they want to be loyal
    to: to Turkey or to their Dutch parties. They cannot deny the Armenian
    Genocide in a Turkish newspaper after they have joined their Dutch parties'
    recognition. Moreover, the European Parliament wrongfully scrapped the
    Armenian genocide from the list of preconditions for Turkey's accession to
    the EU.

    Research is no longer needed for the massacre of the Turkish government
    against the dissenting Armenians in 1915 and late nineteenth century, which
    was the result, among others, of Armenians' loyalty to Turkey's enemies
    during World War I. An abundance of documents, as well as research and
    family stories by Armenians themselves, clearly show that the massacre
    indeed took place and that in those days more than a million people
    perished. Barely anyone returned and the houses remained empty. There are
    photographs of mass executions of Armenians. People can twist around the
    exact numbers of murdered and how it happened, but it is still genocide.

    According to the law, everyone has the right to his or her personal opinion,
    even if it goes against the facts. In the free debate in liberal society,
    the truth will catch up with the lie. The ChristenUnie's (Christian Union)
    bill, which calls for the penalization of genocide denial, therefore, has a
    reverse effect. If the Netherlands adopts this law, it will fall in the same
    trap as Turkey, which penalizes anyone who offends Turkish identity.
    Publicly, we should be able to unmask mistakes, and this even applies to the
    murder of six million Jews. By penalizing denial, as is now the case,
    deniers are given credibility, when there is enough evidence to prove them
    wrong.

    Political parties are free to put candidates on their list who deny the
    Armenian Genocide. However, it is morally objectional, because by brushing
    aside the hard facts, deniers offend a minority. While it might be true that
    parties would arguably receive a significant amount of votes from Dutch
    Turks, it should not be a reason to put them on the list. The PvdA and the
    CDA have therefore done well to withdraw the candidates who deny the
    Armenian Genocide.
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