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  • Comment: A controversial genocide

    Comment: A controversial genocide

    Saturday, 22 December, 2012
    BY ROBERT ELLIS

    The Danish Royal Library has, together with the Armenian embassy, held
    an exhibition on "The Armenian genocide and the Scandinavian reaction"
    though due to protests from the Turkish embassy, the library's
    director, Erland Kolding Nielsen, has agreed to hold an alternative
    exhibition titled, "The so-called Armenian genocide."

    This decision has caused widespread debate and 37 Turkish
    intellectuals, including Taner Akçam, Cengiz Aktar, Murat Belge,
    Baskın Oran and İpek and Oral Çalışlar, have in an open letter in
    Denmark's leading daily Berlingske called on the library's director to
    reconsider his decision.

    In their view, the Turkish government has followed a policy of denial
    for more than 90 years, culminating in the murder of Hrant Dink in
    2007.

    To allow the Turkish government to arrange an alternative exhibition
    will only support this policy.

    As Turkish intellectuals fighting for a democratic Turkey, the
    signatories conclude that Turkey, through its position of denying
    historical truths, represents an obstacle to the development of peace,
    democracy and stability in the Middle East.

    The reason the Armenian genocide is so controversial is because it is
    closely connected with Turkey's self-image and the foundation of the
    Turkish Republic.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has claimed that "Turkey
    has not committed genocide throughout its history" and that "The
    character of this nation does not let it commit such crimes."

    Even in defense of the Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, he has said,
    "a Muslim can never commit genocide."

    Nevertheless, there is overwhelming evidence that Turkey, under the
    leadership of the CUP (Committee of Union and Progress) in 1915, was
    guilty of a premeditated attempt to annihilate the Armenian population
    through massacres and deportation.

    The events must be seen in a historical context, as the Ottoman Empire
    had collapsed and Armenian nationalists - like the Kurds today - were
    demanding independence.

    Turkey had allied itself with Germany during World War I and the
    Russian advance on the eastern front with the support of Armenian
    auxiliaries and the Allied invasion in the west at Gallipoli sealed
    the Armenians' fate.

    A joint declaration by France, Great Britain and Russia on May 24,
    1915 for the first time dealt with the concept of "crimes against
    humanity" and formed the legal basis for the Nuremberg trials and the
    U.N. convention on genocide.

    Turkish nationalists led by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk originally supported
    the punishment of the perpetrators but their attitude changed with the
    Treaty of Sevres and Turkey's partition.

    After the war of independence and the foundation of the Turkish
    Republic in 1923, many of those suspected of war crimes were given
    leading posts in the government.

    In all fairness, it must be stated that Armenian auxiliaries and
    guerillas were responsible for massacres of the Turkish civilian
    population, but these acts of revenge can in no way justify a
    premeditated campaign of racial extermination in the same way that
    German atrocities in Russia after the invasion in 1941 can be excused
    by the behavior of Russian troops in Germany in 1945.

    What makes this topic so sensitive is Turkey's fear that an open
    debate, not to speak of any admission, can lead to territorial claims
    from Armenia.

    This was why Justice Minister Cemil Çiçek in May 2005 called a planned
    conference on Ottoman Armenians at Boğaziçi University "a stab in the
    back of the Turkish nation."

    In 2005, Erdoğan extended an invitation to Armenian president Robert
    Kocharian to establish a joint commission of historians and other
    experts to study the events of 1915, but this was rejected. One way
    forward could be to hold an international conference on the subject,
    where Denmark could act as an "honest broker."

    But the question is, who will take the initiative?

    Robert Ellis is a regular commentator on Turkish affairs in the Danish
    and international press.

    http://famagusta-gazette.com/comment-a-controversial-genocide-p17605-69.htm

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