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German MP Criticizes Government For Position On Armenian Genocide

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  • German MP Criticizes Government For Position On Armenian Genocide

    GERMAN MP CRITICIZES GOVERNMENT FOR POSITION ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    news.am
    March 12 2010
    Armenia

    Member of the German Parliament Katrin Werner sent a letter to
    Minister of State at the German Federal Foreign Office Cornelia Pieper
    expressing disagreement with German government's position on Armenian
    Genocide. Toros Saryan informed NEWS.am that the letter reads:

    "With this position, the German government quite openly endorses
    the official position of the Turkish government, which would like
    to entrust a commission of historians to clarify this question. If,
    however, the German government is of the opinion that what has long
    since been the consensus of the overwhelming majority of historians has
    yet to be clarified, then the question posed to me is: what was the
    meaning and aim of the of the German parliament's motion from 2005,
    in which at least regret is expressed for &'the organized expulsion
    and annihilation of the Armenians'.The crux of the matter is that the
    German government thus undermines its motion, which at the time had
    been voted up unanimously, if it suddenly thinks that historians,
    in face of the vast, empirically documented facts, have to decide
    afresh whether or not these historical facts apply at all.

    Alongside the numerous original source documents which are to be
    found in the archive of the German Foreign Ministry, the genocidal
    quality [of the events] can be recognized even solely from the methods
    that the Young Turk government of the time adopted to carry out the
    deportation of the Armenian population. The so-called &'resettlement'
    of 1915/1916 was directed against the Armenians as a group, whereby
    the men of arms-bearing age were mainly massacred and the women,
    children, and aged, were subjected to such physical living conditions
    that made it impossible for them to survive in the north Mesopotamian
    desert. These were bona fide death marches, mass deaths through hunger
    and epidemics, deportations of children and young women as well as
    mega-killings by regular police guards, irregular killer squads, and
    marauding gangs. If this does not correspond to the criteria of the
    U.N. Genocide Commission of 1948, then I do not know what genocide
    otherwise should look like.

    Similarly, I can not agree with you that it is primarily Turkey and
    Armenia which should undertake the necessary task of working through
    and appraising the past. This must, in my view, apply to Germany even
    in a special way. At that time, the German Empire, as most important
    military ally of the Ottoman Empire, was both in the know and in part
    complicit. German military personnel were involved in the execution of
    the genocide. In the Ottoman Empire, active German firms like Philipp
    Holzmann and the Deutsche Bank made a profit from the deployment of
    Armenian slave laborers in the construction of the Baghdad railway,
    slave laborers who were then dispatched to a certain death. In
    addition, after the First World War, Germany protected leading persons
    responsible for the genocide from legal prosecution. For these reasons,
    today's German government has a very special obligation, even here at
    home -- as, by the way, that parliamentary motion defined as a task --
    to educate children in school classes, for example, about the genocide
    of the Armenians. This would be important for all schoolchildren,
    whether of immigrant background or not.

    We know from German history how important an honest clarification
    process is for the democratic development of a society. It is only
    through acknowledgement of the darker sides of one's own history
    that one can sharpen one's consciousness that something similar will
    hopefully never be repeated. Now, a full 95 years after the fact,
    Armenian descendants of the genocide survivors, here in Germany too,
    are still suffering the psychological effects of having to prove that
    their ancestors were even victims of a crime. This is an unacceptable
    way of dealing with the victims. Moreover, embracing such a position,
    the German government is discouraging those forces in Turkish civil
    society who are taking personal risks to fight for a critical review
    and working through of the historical record. As you yourself remarked
    in your answer, over the past few years in Turkey an increasingly open
    discussion process has happily begun to unfold. And in this process,
    Turkey would require concrete support and encouragement from the
    German government. This, however, assumes that the German government
    itself first unconditionally acknowledge the historical truth about
    the Armenian genocide including German complicity."
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