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  • ANKARA: Scholars To Sue Historian For Singling Out Names

    SCHOLARS TO SUE HISTORIAN FOR SINGLING OUT NAMES

    Hurriyet
    July 15 2011
    Turkey

    Leading Turkish historian on controversial Turkish-Armenian history,
    Taner Akcam is being taken to court in the US for singling out several
    Turkish and American academics for Armenian nationalist attack.

    "Armenian genocide issue is an extremely political field, yet I didn't
    share any explicit names," Akcam says

    Akcam holds the chair in Armenian Genocide Studies in the history
    department at Clark University, Massachusetts.

    Several academics have filed a U.S. lawsuit against Turkish historian
    Taner Akcam, who is known for his research on the Armenian issue,
    alleging that the scholar put them at risk of an Armenian nationalist
    attack following a speech last month.

    "I merely shared a piece of information, which I had picked up
    [earlier,] during a speech I was delivering on the current state of
    affairs in Armenian genocide studies. I did not name any names and
    explicitly stated I did not want to leave anyone under suspicion,"
    Associate Professor Akcam from Clark University's Department of
    History recently told the Hurriyet Daily News by email.

    Akcam gave a speech at a conference at Arizona's Glendale Public
    Library on June 14 during which a number of academics claim
    the historian singled them out as targets for extreme Armenian
    nationalists.

    A Turkish political science expert from Utah University, Professor
    Hakan Yavuz, will be leading the suit on behalf of Professor Guenter
    Lewy from Massachusetts University, Associate Professor Edward
    Erickson from Virginia Marine Corps Command and Staff College and
    Associate Professor Jeremy Salt, who is currently working at Turkey's
    Bilkent University.

    During the speech, Akcam said he shared information given to him in
    December 2010 by a person who asked to remain anonymous that alleged
    that the Turkish Foreign Ministry was handing out hefty sums to
    academics to convince them to produce arguments to counter Armenian
    genocide claims stemming from World War I.

    "I merely shared a piece of information; I wanted to provide a sample
    of how politics interferes in the academic sphere. Frankly, I have yet
    to understand [on what charges] they will be suing [me,]" Akcam said.

    "My source said the documents received [by certain academics] in return
    for the money paid by the Turkish Foreign Ministry are [located] in
    the archives. I repeat once more; it is a journalist's task to research
    this matter. I only transmitted the information. A journalist who was
    present at the conference made news out of [this] subject," Akcam said.

    Yavuz did not respond to questions posted by the Daily News via email.

    Taner Akcam said he thought the information passed on to him by
    his source was safe, a factor which persuaded him to share it with
    his audience.

    "Hakan Yavuz is a person with dubious credibility. I have yet to
    understand why he took [my words] upon himself. What he has said is so
    lowly as to not even warrant a reply," he said. "The Armenian genocide
    is an extremely political field; politics is directly interfering
    with academic work. Armenian genocide studies have to cope with two
    distinct problems: One is about questions and problems [raised by]
    academic research itself, while the other [concerns] problems that
    emerge due to direct intervention by politics. The Turkish Foreign
    Ministry's intervention is among the samples I have cited for this
    second category," he said, adding that all he did was to repeat an
    ordinary fact that was already known to everyone else.

    "One needs to rethink about things if the information supplied to me
    by my source is correct," he said.

    "I say it is necessary to re-examine because the activities undertaken
    in the U.S. by the Turkish Foreign Ministry must seriously be
    re-examined," he added.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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