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Turkey Can Take A Step Forward By Confronting Its Past

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  • Turkey Can Take A Step Forward By Confronting Its Past

    TURKEY CAN TAKE A STEP FORWARD BY CONFRONTING ITS PAST

    The Times
    March 10, 2010
    UK

    The only way forward for a civilised nation is to accept that it was
    responsible for bad things rather than ignore or deny them

    (Adem Al Tania) Protesters, holding Turkish flags, shout slogans during
    a demonstration in front of the U.S. Embassy in Ankara March 5, 2010.

    Sir, I find Norman Stone's apparent view (Opinion, Mar 8), that bad
    things are best forgotten in the interest of economics and politics,
    totally unacceptable, as I am sure do the survivors and relations of
    family members who were the victims of the first ethnic cleansing of
    the 20th century.

    Professor Stone is correct to emphasise that our history is tainted
    by many bad things that happened at the end of empires. However, I
    am sure most would agree that the only way forward for a civilised
    nation is to accept that it was responsible for bad things (as the
    Turks undoubtedly were) rather than ignore or deny them, so that a
    true reconciliation can happen. This is what happened with Germany and
    the Holocaust, white South Africa and apartheid and other appalling
    acts by aggressors through the ages.

    Michael Marcar Cranleigh, Surrey

    Sir, The UN Genocide Convention (1951) defines genocide as acts
    "committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
    ethnic, racial or religious group".

    The Turkish massacre of 1.5 million Armenians in 1915 came into this
    category. Even the ambassador from Germany, one of Turkey's First
    World War allies, reported to Berlin that the Ottoman Government was
    attempting "to exterminate the Armenian race in the Turkish Empire".

    On the eve of the Second World War, Hitler told his troops of his
    intention to exterminate European Jewry, asking: "Who speaks today
    of the annihilation of the Armenians?" His question is inscribed on
    a wall of the Holocaust Memorial in Washington DC.

    Modern Turkey remains in denial over the scale, even the fact, of the
    genocide committed under its Ottoman predecessors. With negotiations
    towards Turkey's EU membership grinding on, recognition now of the
    reality of the Armenian genocide would signal Turkey's coming of age as
    a European democracy confident enough to come to terms with its past.

    David Rudnick Harrow, Middx

    Sir, Norman Stone's selective view of the Armenian genocide
    conveniently ignores the part played by religion. What he and other
    apologists for Turkey consistently ignore is that Pontic Greeks
    and Assyrians were killed in large numbers at the same time. These
    communities were never nationalist groupings taking part in an
    uprising against Ottoman Turkey and were not, therefore, killed in
    the fog of war.

    Stone's comments on Cyprus were particularly insensitive because its
    well-integrated Armenian community, having fled the Ottoman persecution
    to British Cyprus, were then forcibly expelled again from their homes
    in the north of the island after Turkey's invasion in 1974.

    Like the US Congress, the European Parliament believes that the mass
    killings in Armenia constituted genocide, as we now define it. Turkey
    would be far better off by confronting its past and making peace with
    Armenia by reopening its border with its neighbour and re-establishing
    diplomatic relations rather than waging a constant campaign of denial.

    Dr Charles Tannock, MEP UK Conservative Foreign Affairs Spokesman

    Sir, Turks and Armenians participating in the Turkish-Armenian
    Reconciliation Commission, which I chaired, requested a legal analysis
    on "the applicability of the Genocide Convention to Events during
    the early Twentieth Century." The legal analysis employed a far more
    rigorous definition than Norman Stone who simply defines genocide as
    "the sort of thing Hitler did."

    The crime of genocide has four elements - 1, The perpetrator killed
    one or more persons. 2, Such person or persons belonged to a particular
    national, racial or religious group.

    3, The perpetrator intended to destroy in whole or in part that group,
    as such, and 4, The conduct took place as part of a manifest pattern
    of conduct. Since some Ottoman leaders knew that the deportation
    of Armenians from eastern Anatolia would result in many deaths, the
    legal analysis concluded that the perpetrators possessed the requisite
    genocidal intent and thus the events include all the elements of the
    crime of genocide as defined by the Genocide Convention.

    The legal analysis also concluded that the Genocide Convention
    contains no provision mandating its retroactive application. It
    was, in fact, intended to impose prospective obligations to its
    signatories. Therefore, no legal, financial or territorial claims
    arising out of the events could successfully be made under the
    convention.

    The outcome was a win-win. It validated the suffering of Armenians
    as genocide and freed Turkey from liability. Opponents of genocide
    recognition may muddy the facts, but they should not distort the
    legal definition of genocide embodied in the convention.

    David L. Phillips Director, Programme on Conflict Prevention and
    Peacebuilding, American University, Washington
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