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ISTANBUL: Why Golda Meir was right (II)

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  • ISTANBUL: Why Golda Meir was right (II)

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    March 7 2012


    Why Golda Meir was right (II)

    by Burak Bekdil

    In the half a year since I wrote `Why Golda Meir was right' (Hürriyet
    Daily News, Aug.
    23, 2011) the Syrian death toll has moved from 2,000 to over 7,000 -
    about five times more than the Palestinian casualties during Israel's
    Operation Cast Lead in late 2008 and early 2009.

    These distressing figures forcefully remind us of Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip ErdoÄ?an's famous dictums: 1. Muslims don't kill, and 2. (Jews)
    know well how to kill.

    `Why Golda Meir was right' aimed to illustrate unpleasant death
    statistics in a way Islamist ears refuse to hear:

    `Sudan is not in the conventional Middle East, so let's ignore the
    genocide there. Let's ignore, also, the West Pakistani massacres in
    East Pakistan (Bangladesh) totaling 1.25 million in 1971. Or the
    200,000 deaths in Algeria in the war between Islamists and the
    government from 1991 to 2006.

    `But simple, strictly Middle East research will give you 1 million
    deaths in the all-Muslim Iran-Iraq war; 300,000 Muslim minorities
    killed by Saddam Hussein; 80,000 Iranians killed during the Islamic
    revolution; 25,000 deaths from 1970 to 1971, the days of Black
    September, by the Jordanian government in its fight against the
    Palestinians; and 20,000 Islamists killed in 1982 by the elder
    al-Assad in Hama. The World Health Organization's estimate of Osama
    bin Laden's carnage in Iraq was already 150,000 a few years earlier.

    `In a 2007 study, Gunnar Heinsohn from the University of Bremen and
    Daniel Pipes, director of the Middle East Forum, found that some 11
    million Muslims have been violently killed since 1948, of which
    35,000, (0.3 percent) died during the six years of Arab war against
    Israel, or one out of every 315 fatalities. In contrast, over 90
    percent who perished were killed by fellow Muslims.'

    More recently, in a blistering critique of Iran's sectarian support
    for the Syrian regime, Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arınç said on Feb.
    5: `I am addressing the Islamic Republic of Iran: I do not know if you
    are worthy of being called Islamic. Have you said a single thing about
    what is happening in Syria?'

    Mr. Arınç was right. All the same, someone else could have simply
    asked: `I am addressing Turkey's good Muslim rulers: I do not know if
    you are worthy of being called good Muslims. Have you said a single
    thing about what happened in Sudan? About what is happening in
    Bahrain? Which religion is the perpetrator of never-ending murders in
    the Middle East and North Africa (including Syria)? Why do Muslims
    kill other Muslims en masse, then turn around and tell the entire
    world that `Muslims don't kill?' What is the world's real Muslim
    population if all of these killings have been perpetrated by
    non-Muslims?'

    Why did thousands of Turks who gathered in a demonstration to protest
    the Khojaly massacre of 1992 praise and semantically impersonate Ogün
    Samast, the killer of Turkish journalist of Armenian origin Hrant
    Dink? Why did they shout `You are all Armenians, you are all
    bastards?' Were those Turks, who were ready to butcher any Armenian in
    sight, Buddhists?

    But according to Mr. ErdoÄ?an, the too-visible hate-speech at that
    demonstration merely constituted an `isolated/individual incident.' In
    other words, none of the hate slogans, chants and placards at the
    gathering are worth investigating legally. Would Mr. Erdogan think the
    same if the same hate speech had been directed at Muslims or Turks?
    Are we not all equal before the law?

    Mr. Erdogan is siding with the Syrians oppressed by the al-Assad
    regime. Perhaps he should lend an ear to one of the victims, a
    one-legged revolutionary singer undergoing medical treatment in safe
    Turkish territory. Time magazine quotes the man, one of the 300 who
    have fled to Turkey in the most recent wave of refugees, as saying:
    `We'd rather accept Israel than Bashar [¦] The Israelis didn't do to
    the Palestinians what Bashar has done to Syria.'
    Who, really, knows better how to kill?
    March/07/2012

    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/why-golda-meir-was-right-ii-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=15397&NewsCatID=398




    From: A. Papazian
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