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The Prevention Of Crimes Against Humanity Is Still Imperative: Edwar

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  • The Prevention Of Crimes Against Humanity Is Still Imperative: Edwar

    THE PREVENTION OF CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY IS STILL IMPERATIVE: EDWARD NALBANDIAN

    18:14, 20 Apr 2015
    Siranush Ghazanchyan

    Armenia's Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian's Article has been
    published in a special issue of magazine

    The prevention of crimes against humanity is still imperative

    In the current world of drastic political changes, the international
    community and individual States occasionally do not manage to address
    issues, which at first glance do not seem urgent, even though there
    is an understanding that addressing them is of high importance.

    Genocide prevention is one of such issues. The Armenian nation, which
    survived the first genocide of the 20th century, feels a strong moral
    responsibility to bring its contribution to international efforts
    in prevention of crimes against humanity. We have exerted our best
    efforts and will continue to do so for that purpose.

    The recurrence of genocide or its threat is not a turned page for
    humanity. Genocide prevention always requires the constant attention
    and best efforts of the civilized world, without subordinating that
    noble humanitarian cause to any geopolitical calculations.

    No single person can feel safe while there is an attempt to exterminate
    a whole ethnic group somewhere in the world. Every measure should be
    taken beforehand, first of all to prevent the genocidal environment
    from maturing into irreversible acts of violence.

    Testimonies of the Armenian Genocide can be found in any part of the
    world, particularly where Armenians live. The Armenian people passed
    through the horrors of that tragedy in the Ottoman Empire. There was
    an attempt to strip millions of Armenians of their right to life, as
    well as their past -- thousands of cultural and religious monuments
    were destroyed and the survivors were driven off the lands they had
    inhabited for many centuries.

    One of the aspects inherent to the case of the Armenian Genocide is
    the presence of direct international obligations of the Ottoman Empire,
    which adhered towards the great powers at the Berlin Conference in 1878
    "to carry out, without further delay, the ameliorations and reforms,
    which are called for by local needs in the provinces inhabited by
    Armenians and to guarantee their security" (1).

    Under the circumstances of continuous harassments of the Armenians
    in the Ottoman Empire, instead of improvement of the plight of the
    Armenians, the world witnessed Armenian massacres and pogroms. The
    most large-scale massacres before the genocide were committed by the
    Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II between 1894 and 1896 when around 300,000
    Armenians were killed, and in the 1909 Adana Massacres committed by
    the Young Turks, when around 30,000 Armenians were massacred.

    Back then no effective measures were taken to call the perpetrators
    of these massacres to justice. The atmosphere of impunity largely
    contributed to yet more horrendous massacres of around 1.5 million
    Armenians, with World War I serving as a "suitable" cover for their
    implementation. Thus, the genocidal policy of the Ottoman Empire
    continued for more than a quarter of a century and culminated by what
    the Armenians called "Mets Yeghern" (The Great Calamity).

    The first time the great powers paid a concerted attention to the
    massacres was on May 24, 1915, when the Allied Powers -- Russia,
    France and Great Britain, adopted a special declaration warning the
    perpetrators of the atrocities against the Armenian people that they
    would be held personally responsible for "these new crimes of Turkey
    against humanity and civilization." This was one of the first occasions
    of the use of the term "crimes against humanity" on an international
    level, leading to its elaboration as an inherent concept of the
    contemporary international legal system. In 1929 Winston Churchill
    characterized the Armenian massacres as a "holocaust" and added that
    "this crime was planned and executed for political reasons.

    The opportunity presented itself for clearing Turkish soil of a
    Christian race."

    Nowadays some Turkish narratives are presenting their own perceptions
    of history as the only true ones, a "just memory" into which other
    peoples' memories should fit. This is an exercise against memory
    and history. The study of history suffers when memory is applied
    selectively, when "the organized murder of the Armenian race" is
    presented as imaginative memory of the descendants of the survivors.

    In fact, the Armenian Genocide is a part of the memory and history of
    the Armenian nation and of humanity as a whole, including the Muslim
    world. One of the earliest references to the Armenian Genocide comes
    from a Muslim witness, Fayez El Ghossein, who in 1916 published his
    work entitled "The Massacres in Armenia." Sharif of Mecca Hussein
    ibn Ali al-Hashimi was one of the prominent Islamic leaders, who
    acted against the annihilation of the Armenians and called on his
    subjects to defend Armenians as they would defend themselves and
    their children. In 1919-1921 Turkish public figures such as Refi
    Cevat, Ahmet Refik Altinay and many others referred to the large
    scale extermination of Armenians. Many Muslim historians refer to
    the massacres of Armenians as genocide, while Arab historian Moussa
    Prince used the term "Armenocide", considering it as "the most
    genocidal genocide."

    The Arab authors Fuad Hasan Hafiz, Samir Arbash and others defined
    the Armenian Genocide as "the blood page in the history of mankind of
    the 20th century." It was the absence of the unequivocal condemnation
    and elimination of consequences of the Armenian Genocide that made
    the young philologist Rafael Lemkin in 1921 ask his professor why
    the Armenians did not have the masterminds of the Armenian Calamity
    prosecuted. To that question his professor replied that there was no
    law under which they could be brought to justice. Afterwards Lemkin
    decided to get immersed in international law dedicating his life to
    the study of crimes against humanity, which, among others, paved the
    way for the adoption of the 1948 Convention. Lemkin alluded that he
    defined the term genocide also by referring to the very policy of mass
    extermination perpetrated against Armenians. It was the Shoah that
    pushed the international community to codify the crime of genocide
    through the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
    Crime of Genocide. The following seven decades have demonstrated that
    all good-will is not enough to exclude genocides and crimes against
    humanity from happening again.

    Close examination of the genocides of the 20th century demonstrates
    that the perpetrators of genocides in different geographical areas and
    different historical periods have been "skilled enough" to identify
    the tactics of their murderous predecessors and learn from them. The
    Young Turk's Committee of Union and Progress in Turkey, the National
    Socialist German Workers' Party in Germany, and the Hutu National
    Revolutionary Movement for Democracy in Rwanda all used special
    paramilitary organizations as the main perpetrators of mass killings.

    These were Teskilat Mahsusa, the Schutzstaffel, Interahamwe. These as
    well as other crimes against humanity had many other similarities
    in the genocidal practices, such as the treatment of victims,
    expropriation of their properties and ways of extermination.

    Oppressions, intolerance towards and demonization of the
    representatives of ethnic, religious, minority and other groups and
    their cultural heritage, and limited ethnic cleansings could indicate
    the emergence of genocidal atmospheres, and require immediate,
    unconditional and united preventive efforts from the international
    community.

    The failure to prevent genocide in one place provides a solid ground
    for its recurrence in other places. In this context many refer to
    Hitler's quotation from August 1939 when he rhetorically asked "Who
    still talks nowadays of the extermination of the Armenians?"

    Genocides do not occur according to a single model and in order
    to develop preventive mechanisms we should have an accurate
    understanding of the history of genocides, their causes, the methods
    of implementation and the subsequent developments. At the same time,
    we must be ready to learn from past failures and be ready for new
    challenges.

    One of the main contemporary documents enclosing the main measures for
    the prevention of the crime of genocide is the UN Human Rights Council
    Resolution of 22nd March 2013, initiated by Armenia and co-sponsored
    by 62 countries. It envisages the necessary international measures for
    genocide prevention. Particularly, we can see the three main pillars
    of genocide prevention: early warning, human rights protection, and
    public campaign for education and awareness. These pillars include
    a number of components.

    First, the convention envisages that the international community must
    be aware of the risk of genocide as early as possible in order to react
    promptly, before it is too late. Usually perpetrators of genocides
    try to hide their intentions as long as possible. However, it is
    quite hard for them to cover up the preparation of such grave crimes
    for a long time. Hence the international community and particularly
    international organizations should evaluate the origins of genocidal
    atmosphere leading to this heinous crime and effectively prevent it.

    Over the course of the past decade both the United Nations and
    the regional bodies, as well as some human rights NGO s, have made
    much progress in improving early warning and assessment systems. We
    should do our utmost to ensure that these advances continue in the
    years ahead. Early identification and warning by themselves will
    not be effective unless they are followed by concrete mechanisms of
    deterrence and protection.

    Second, prevention of genocide is a part of the complex international
    mechanisms of the human rights protection. This is the basic and
    most efficient way to exclude the possibility of the occurrence of a
    genocidal atmosphere in a society. Strong legal traditions and moral
    values stand on the most important defense line against these horrible
    crimes. Genocide is an unthinkable crime for a society which is founded
    on the protection of human rights, on the values of mutual respect,
    tolerance and non-violence. In other words, genocide is dead before it
    is born in a society with strong human rights protection traditions
    and vice versa -- human rights protection is basically non-existent
    wherever genocide occurs.

    The connecting chain of human rights protection and genocide
    prevention is the protection of ethnic, religious and other
    minorities' rights. For most cases of genocide the main objective of
    the perpetrators is the extermination of an ethnic minority. Reasons
    for such a crime may be the wish to prevent a minority group from
    implementing its right to self-determination. In order to rule out the
    possibility of such developments the international community should
    particularly assist the States that have a diverse ethnic population
    to maintain proper human rights protection and particularly minority
    rights protection.

    Moreover wherever it is necessary, the international community
    should support the peaceful implementation of the right to
    self-determination of the peoples. As it was mentioned in a recent
    report by an Independent Expert, Alfred-Maurice de Zayas for the UN ,
    rather than perceiving self-determination as a source of conflict,
    a better approach is to see armed conflict as a consequence of the
    violation of self-determination.

    Finally, the third pillar of goals envisaged in the UN Human Rights
    Council Resolution is to raise public awareness through education
    and remembrance. Generations should get accurate knowledge of the
    history of past tragedies, past genocides. The full acknowledgement
    and condemnation of committed genocides are one of the most effective
    tools for the prevention of their reoccurrence in the future. This is
    particularly an important condition for the possibility of an effective
    reconciliation among peoples who directly encountered genocide. The
    right of people to their memory, their right to knowledge of the
    history of past tragedies through education and remembrance has
    pivotal roles on preventing and condemning genocide.

    Genocide scholars nowadays consider genocide denial as one of the
    stages of genocide. According to the Genocide Watch following
    classification, symbolization, discrimination, dehumanization,
    organization, polarization, preparation, persecution and extermination,
    the denial is classified as the final stage that lasts throughout and
    always follows genocide. It is among the surest indicators of further
    genocides, because along with impunity, denial paves the way for the
    repetition of new crimes against humanity.

    Independently of geopolitical or any other interests, all members of
    the international community should stand together in the recognition,
    condemnation and punishment of past genocides, especially in light of
    the 1968 Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations,
    in their efforts towards their prevention in the future. As it is
    mentioned in the preamble of the abovementioned resolution, the
    impunity for the crime of genocide, war crimes and crimes against
    humanity encourages their occurrence and is a fundamental obstacle
    to the furtherance of cooperation among peoples and the promotion of
    international peace and security. Fighting impunity for such crimes
    is an important factor in their prevention. Genocide remembrance
    days should be days of mourning not only for the descendants of
    victims, but for the descendants of the perpetrators. These days
    should be approached with commitment to move towards recognition
    and reconciliation. The true reconciliation cannot be achieved by
    forgetting the past, feeding younger generations with tales of denial.

    Moreover, in the current globalized world it is gradually becoming
    impossible for a State to conceal from its own society all the facts
    concerning the tragic events of the past. Hence, continuing the
    policy of denial and falsification of facts simply widens the gap of
    understanding between the very government and the society in a State
    which or the predecessor of which perpetrated genocide.

    The civilized world should resolutely reject the incitement to hatred,
    racism, dissemination of intolerance, denial of genocide, and crimes
    against humanity under the guise of freedom of expression. One of
    the tools of denial nowadays is the minimization of the suffering of
    the victims, trivialization of the scale of the losses and equation
    of the sufferings of the victims and the perpetrators. Recently,
    we have often witnessed this new tactic of "soft denial".

    These are the main measures that are envisaged for the prevention
    of the reoccurrence of genocides. But whatever measures we take, we
    cannot expect effective results unless there is a proper realization
    of how important it is to prevent any occurrence of genocide and
    without sufficient will by the members of the international community
    to take practical steps whenever it is necessary. No matter how often
    we take measures for the prevention of genocides, these efforts will
    be rewarded if we observe and enforce all available prevention tools.

    As exactly a century ago, nowadays too, witnessing new attempts at
    genocides and new tactics of their denials, the issue of preventing
    crimes against humanity is still imperative.

    http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/20/the-%E2%80%AA%E2%80%8Eprevention%E2%80%AC-of-%E2%80%AAcrimes%E2%80%AC-against-humanity-is-still-imperative-edward-nalbandian/




    From: A. Papazian
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