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ISTANBUL: `Turkish Sarkozys' versus `Sarkozyland' ex parte Armenians

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  • ISTANBUL: `Turkish Sarkozys' versus `Sarkozyland' ex parte Armenians

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Dec 23 2011


    `Turkish Sarkozys' versus `Sarkozyland' ex parte Armenians

    Ä°HSAN YILMAZ


    I find Turkey's reaction to `Sarkozyland's' genocide bill needlessly
    exaggerated. Both

    the Turkish media and opposition are trying to benefit from the
    process. At the end of the day, the bill is not a definitive
    scientific verdict on the issue, and everyone can see that France is
    not working on the moral high ground but for shameless domestic and
    international political gain. Who takes Sarkozyland seriously and why
    should we?

    The government should not elevate the tension in the country and
    should not aggravate the feelings of its citizens by overreacting to
    the incident. Most importantly, Turkey should not blackmail France by
    claiming she will do certain actions if she will not be able to impose
    them. This could indeed undermine the credibility and prestige of the
    country.

    Saying this does not mean that France should not be punished. What I
    am saying is that the government should work on carefully drafted,
    effective plans that will work and harm France in the long run.
    Otherwise, only resorting to emotions and reminding Turks how great
    their grandfathers were are not effective tools against France. France
    and Germany have been trying to distance Turkey from the EU process
    and our reactions and actions should play into their hands. In this
    regard, it has been wise to base our arguments on the basis of freedom
    of speech. This message should directly be communicated to the French
    people and intelligentsia and in order to be effective, we should not
    look like cowboys and rough hooligans. Some ministers who think they
    are making very clever jokes should revisit their domestic
    consumption-focused attitude. Talking about freedom of speech to gain
    the moral high ground on this issue, the government must as soon as
    possible annul the notorious Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code
    (TCK) that criminalizes the `insults to Turkishness' that killed Hrant
    Dink.

    I do not find reminding France now of its own massacres in Africa
    ethical. If Turkey had a problem with these very obvious crimes
    against humanity, then she had to tackle them in a sophisticated
    manner even when we had good relations with France. Remembering these
    atrocities and bloody massacres that terminated millions only when we
    have a problem with France simply reduces Turkey to Sarkozyland's
    moral nadir. France should not be our teacher in this dirty political
    game that tries to gain advantages from other people's sorrow and
    pain. I would urge our state to make plans on the issue for the long
    run and educate experts, scholars and academics who would study these
    alleged crimes against humanity all over the world, including Turkey.
    Nevertheless, I know very well that after a few weeks an enthusiastic,
    emotional anti-French festive season, we will all return to our myopic
    daily lives and wake up in April again when another bill approaches
    the US Congress. We deserve our politicians.

    A more robust strategy to tackle Sarkozy-type politicians so that they
    will not gain an advantage from the Armenian issues includes our
    normalization vis-Ã-vis 1915. Even the official Turkish version
    accepts that several hundred thousand Armenians were either massacred
    or died because of the terrible conditions during their forced
    deportation. Whatever the cause of the decision to deport these people
    was, in the final analysis, it was the state's primary duty to protect
    these innocent civilians against whom there was not any court verdict.
    Turkey has to apologize at least for its inability to protect them.
    Then, it must invite Armenians abroad to come and get their
    inheritance in Turkey. Thirdly, Turkey must erect some monuments and
    build museums for these massacred, great people who had lived in these
    lands for thousands of years but faced extinction because of some
    secular-nationalist Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) dictators'
    faulty, to say the least, decisions and actions.

    These are primarily our moral duties that we must fulfill even if
    there is not one Sarkozy on Earth.

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