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Preventive Apologies?: Erdogan Admission Of Kurdish Massacres Viewed

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  • Preventive Apologies?: Erdogan Admission Of Kurdish Massacres Viewed

    PREVENTIVE APOLOGIES?: ERDOGAN ADMISSION OF KURDISH MASSACRES VIEWED IN YEREVAN AS COURTING EU MEMBERSHIP
    By Naira Hayrumyan

    ArmeniaNow
    28.11.11

    After the surprise announcement by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, who apologized for the massacre of Kurds in Dersim in 1937-39,
    when, according to official figures, 13,000 were killed, a question
    arose about the next step. First of all, whether this will be limited
    to an apology, or there will be some reimbursement to the Kurds
    for their material losses, and secondly, whether the Turkish prime
    minister will also apologize to the Armenians for the 1915 Genocide.

    Enlarge Photo Giro ManoyanApparently, Turkey feels very uncomfortable
    because of international pressure and, by taking 'preventive' steps,
    is trying to shift the matter from the material-territorial plane into
    the moral dimension. Any hope of an apology to Armenia, has always
    been shaded by whether Genocide survivors would demand a return of
    their land.

    Armenia has repeatedly stated that it has no territorial claims
    against Turkey. At the same time, the government of Armenia does
    not recognize the current borders of Turkey. And, for decades, the
    Armenian Diaspora has pushed for international recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide and the fact that the Turkish Republic was built
    through the extermination of the indigenous population. And this could
    call into question the legal basis of Turkey's territorial integrity.

    Presumably, the Turkish government is preparing some kind of gesture
    timed to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide of 1915,
    although it is hard to predict anything now. This opinion was expressed
    by Turkish historian, professor of the Clark University in the United
    States, prominent scholar Taner Akcam. "I do not know what it might
    be, but will not be surprised if something happens,' said Akcam.

    Armenian experts generally comment on this statement in light
    of Turkey's intentions to join the European Union. Giro Manoyan,
    Director of the International Secretariat of the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) Bureau in Yerevan, said Erdogan's apology
    wasn't really an apology and that such steps towards Armenians were
    unlikely.

    Earlier, Turkish President Abdullah Gul, visiting from London,
    stated that problems that exist in the relations between Armenia
    and Turkey will not be solved by a single step. According to him,
    the normalization process is so frozen that whole raft of initiatives
    is needed for a thaw.

    In its turn, Turkey's influential Today's Zaman newspaper raises
    deep psychological issues, trying to figure out why Ankara does
    not recognize the tragedies of the early 20th century. The reason,
    according to the newspaper, lies in the foundations of the modern
    Turkish identity.

    "There are even more painful factors, some of which have been pointed
    out by Taner Akcam and other writers. Some of those who played active
    roles in the massacres of the Armenians were also part of the founding
    cadres of the Turkish Republic. Thus, facing up to the past also
    means that we may lose our founding 'heroes' and have them turned
    into a series of 'murderers' to be embarrassed about instead. It is
    now clear that we in Turkey have constructed an identity on top of
    this whole denial mechanism," writes the Turkish publication.

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