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  • Turkey's PM To Armenians: Get Out!

    TURKEY'S PM TO ARMENIANS: GET OUT!
    By Stephen Brown

    http://frontpagemag.com/2010/03/25/turkeys- pm-to-armenians-get-out/print/
    March 25, 2010 @ 12:04 am

    Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan showed the European Union
    recently why his country's membership application should be rejected.

    In an interview with the BBC last week, Erdogan expressed his
    extreme displeasure with foreign countries recognising as genocide
    the 1915 massacre of the Armenians by threatening to deport [1]
    100,000 Armenians working illegally in Turkey.

    "In my country there are 170,000 Armenians; 70,000 of them are
    citizens. We tolerate 100,000 more. So what am I going to do tomorrow?

    If necessary I will tell the 100,000: okay, time to go back your
    country. Why? They are not my citizens. I am not obliged to keep them
    in my country," said Erdogan, leader of Turkey's ruling Justice and
    Development Party, a conservative and Islamic political entity.

    Erdogan blamed the Armenian Diaspora for the genocide resolutions.

    The reaction to Erdogan's statement in Armenia was, predictably,
    swift and damning. Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian condemned
    the Turkish leader's remarks, saying they "do not improve relations"
    between the two countries. The plan to open the Turkish-Armenian
    border, a prerequisite for Turkey acquiring EU membership, and to
    set up a joint commission to investigate the massacres may now be
    in jeopardy.

    "When the Turkish Prime Minister allows himself to make such statements
    it brings up memories of the events of 1915," said Sarkisian, whose
    government disputes the 100,000 figure [1].

    In 1915, shortly after Turkey's entry into World War One, 1.5 million
    primarily Armenian Christians living in the then Ottoman Empire,
    in an action resembling later slaughters by Stalin and Hitler, were
    subjected to massacres and deportations that often ended in death. The
    world's indifference to the killings may even have encouraged Hitler
    who later referred to the 1915 Armenian holocaust in relation to his
    planned genocide of the Jews: "After all, who today speaks of the
    massacre of the Armenians?"

    The three million Armenians living in their truncated state on
    Turkey's eastern border are as traumatised about the tragedy that
    befell their people as the Jews are about the Holocaust. Asia Times
    columnist Spengler (a literary pseudonym) has called them "the ghosts
    of their murdered brethren" who "haunt the geopolitical stage as a
    silent chorus."

    Turkish nationalists deny that an Armenian holocaust ever took place.

    They will only admit that about three hundred thousand Armenians and an
    almost equal number of Turks were killed in "civil strife" in eastern
    Turkey between 1915 and 1917. The 1915 deportations, they claim, were
    justified because some Armenians were supporting the Russian army,
    Turkey's enemy at the time. The Armenians were regarded as a knife
    at Turkey's back that had to be removed.

    But the deniers are fighting a losing battle. Already, more than 20
    countries have labelled as genocide the 1915 Armenian bloodbath,
    including EU member states France, Germany and Italy. The United
    States and Sweden are the latest countries to move in that direction.

    When Erdogan was in England, Sweden's parliament voted to recognise the
    Armenian killings, prompting the Turkish leader to cancel his visit
    there and recall his country's ambassador. The American government's
    House Foreign Affairs Committee passed a resolution (23 votes to 22)
    to the same effect, which, according to The Wall Street Journal [2],
    angered Turkey.

    But there are some Turks who want their country to confront this
    tragic crime in their nation's past. The most prominent of these
    is Orhan Pamuk [3], the 2006 Nobel Laureate for Literature. Called
    by Spengler "the only Turk with a global voice", Pamuk raised the
    Armenian genocide with a Swiss publication in 2005.

    "Thirty thousand Kurds have been killed here, and a million Armenians.

    And almost nobody dares mention that. So I do," Pamuk said.

    For these remarks, Pamuk was criminally charged [4] with "insulting
    Turkishness." Legal proceedings were later stayed, but the resulting
    furor and hate campaign caused Pamuk to move to New York.

    Other Turks, while not dealing with the genocide question, criticised
    Erdogan for his BBC comments. One Turkish journalist, Mehmet Ali
    Briand, pointed out the irony of Erdogan denying the first Armenian
    deportation, when he wants to organize a "second deportation" [5],
    one that television cameras would witness.

    "We could defend ourselves all we want...no one would believe us,"
    he wrote. "They'd say, 'See, again the Turks are casting out the
    Armenians.' " Briand suggests instead that since these Armenians are
    mostly poor people, doing menial work, who came to Turkey after the
    1988 earthquake in Armenia, they should be shown compassion. These
    people would then preserve Turkey's dignity, enhance its image and be
    "our strongest and most convinced lobby."

    A Times On Line story [6] suggests Erdogan's hard-line comments may
    have been directed towards a domestic audience rather than a foreign
    one. According to The Times account, since the next elections in
    Turkey are this July, Erdogan was trying to appease the voters who
    opposed reconciliation with Armenia.

    Most likely though, Erdogan's remarks are simply a "barbaric reaction"
    to offended dignity, similar to the Muslim reaction to the Mohammad
    cartoons.

    But Erdogan's comments may represent something more sinister than just
    an ethnic tantrum. Briand quotes another Turkish politician who said,
    "Turkey should teach Armenia a lesson never to be forgotten." Erdogan
    is also not the first Turkish politician to advocate deporting the
    illegal Armenians, but is Turkey's first leader. Like with Holocaust
    deniers whose negations conceal their desire to bring about another
    round of Jew extermination, the denial of the Armenian genocide may
    be serving the same purpose.

    A new Armenian massacre may have been avoided as recently as the
    last decade. In his book Chechen Jihad, Yossef Bodansky writes that
    2,500 Islamist fighters from Afghanistan helped Azerbaijan, "under the
    banner of jihad", in the early 1990s in its war against Armenia over
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Bodansky states the Azeris exploited "the mujahedin's
    Islamist zeal to escalate the war against the Christian Armenians..."

    This zeal, as the world has seen, usually means death for non-Muslims.

    The Armenian forces, however, held firm and the jihadists' savage
    hatred for the infidel fortunately never reached their territory.

    Orhan Pamuk believes freedom of speech is the only way for Turkey
    to come to terms with its past. But if Erdogan continues to utter
    offensive remarks against Armenians like in the previous week, his
    country will not have future, at least not in the EU.

    Article printed from FrontPage Magazine:
    http://frontpagemag.com URL to article:
    http://frontpagemag.com/2010/03/25/turkey %e2%80%99s-pm-to-armenians-get-out/
    URLs in this post: [1] threatening to deport:
    http://www.asbarez.com/78347/erdogan-threa tens-to-deport-armenians-from-turkey/
    [2] The Wall Street Journal:
    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100014240 52748704059004575128083028873948.html
    [3] Orhan Pamuk: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orhan_Pamuk
    [4] criminally charged:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/4205708.stm [5] "second deportation":
    http://times.am/2010/03/19/no-d ear-prime-minister-don%25E2%2580%2599t-touch-the-a rmenians-protect-them/
    [6] Times On Line story:
    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world /europe/article7066218.ece

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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