ARMENIAN TRAGEDY STILL RAW IN TURKEY 100 YEARS ON
By Mark LowenBBC News, Istanbul
9 hours ago/22/04/15
>From the sectionEurope
Sevag Balikci's family say his death was connected to the anniversary
of the massacre
Sevag Balikci never got to see his new bedroom.
His family, ethnic Armenians from Turkey, moved into their Istanbul
apartment at the start of 2011.
Sevag was finishing his military service in the south-east. On 24
April, aged 25, he was shot dead by a fellow recruit.
The judge called it an accident, sentencing the killer to four years
in prison. The family is convinced it was an intentional act by a
Turkish nationalist, timed for maximum effect.
The 24th April is the date on which Armenians commemorate the darkest
moment in their history: when - 100 years ago this week - they began
to be rounded up in a crumbling Ottoman Empire and were deported
or killed.
Armenian children at a refugee camp in 1915
Armenia says 1.5 million were systematically murdered, calling it
"genocide".
Turkey fiercely rejects the label, insisting far fewer died - many of
starvation or disease - and that the deaths of Turks have been ignored.
'The same fate'
As the centenary of the tragedy approaches, historical narratives
are colliding.
"The genocide was being commemorated and the killer wanted to
intimidate people through my son," says Ani Belakci, Sevag's mother.
"An Armenian had to die on that day - and Sevag was available.
"The authorities have leant on witnesses to change statements -
it suits them to say it's an accident."
Sevag Balikci's grave lies at the heart of Istanbul's Armenian cemetery
She shows me her son's room, which she has kept as it was.
"We can't throw out his belongings because it would be like saying
goodbye to him," she says, her tears flowing.
"A century ago, my family were killed in the genocide - and now one
of their descendants, my son, has met the same fate."
Hushed up
Armenians had long been treated as second-class citizens in the
Ottoman Empire, their sporadic revolts ruthlessly suppressed.
As World War One raged, Ottoman leaders blamed faltering national
cohesion for losses in the Balkans and elsewhere, seeing the Armenian
minority as a threat.
Armenian genocide dispute
Hundreds of thousands of Armenians died in 1915 at the hands of the
Ottoman Turks, whose empire was disintegrating Many of the victims
were civilians deported to barren desert regions where they died
of starvation and thirst. Thousands also died in massacres Armenia
says up to 1.5 million people were killed. Turkey says the number
of deaths was much smaller Most non-Turkish scholars of the events
regard them as genocide - as do more than 20 states including France,
Germany and Russia, and some international bodies such as the European
Parliament Turkey rejects the term 'genocide', maintaining that many
of the dead were killed in clashes during World War One, and that
many ethnic Turks also suffered in the conflict
Find out more about what happened
>From a pre-war Armenian population of two million, just 50,000 remain
in Turkey today.
Around 20 countries, including France, Italy and Canada, officially
recognise the killings as genocide.
But for decades Turks grew up unaware of what happened in 1915.
Textbooks omitted it; political leaders hushed it up, pursuing the
"Turkification" of society.
When it was finally talked about here, the official Turkish version
called it "the Armenian events".
But in the past decade, history classes at some universities have
begun to address the period and a small liberal fringe has spoken out.
Professor Ahmet Insel says Turkey has a moral obligation to recognise
the tragedy as "genocide"
Three hundred Turkish intellectuals signed a petition asking Armenia
for forgiveness, among them Ahmet Insel, a professor at Galatasaray
University.
"This was a genocide and a crime against humanity," he says, standing
outside the Islamic Arts museum in Istanbul, the site where the first
Armenians were rounded up.
"Turkey has a moral obligation to recognise it as such, so as to
become a civilised modern democracy."
He says he does not expect formal recognition within the next 10 years.
"The charge of genocide could mean Armenians claim financial
compensation from Turkey - that's one factor holding it back."
Rhetoric hardened
The current government has slowly moved forward on the issue, returning
some confiscated properties to Armenians.
And, last year, the then Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan - now
President - offered his "condolences" to families of the victims,
calling the killings "inhumane".
It was the furthest a political leader had gone in Turkey, but was
rejected by Armenia for dodging the word "genocide".
In the run-up to the centenary, the rhetoric has again hardened.
The president is keen to maintain support among nationalists ahead
of the election
When Pope Francis said two weeks ago that Armenians had suffered "the
first genocide of the 20th Century" Mr Erdogan hit back, saying he
"condemned" the Pope, warning him not to "repeat the mistake".
Partly the president is shoring up core nationalist votes ahead of an
election in June. But partly too, Turkey, which cares so much for its
prestige and strongman image, recoils at a word linked with Rwanda,
Srebrenica and Auschwitz.
'Distract attention'
Perhaps no clearer example of the reluctance to mark the killings will
come on the anniversary itself, when Turkey will instead lavishly
commemorate 100 years since the Gallipoli campaign: the victory of
Ottoman forces over invading Allied troops.
It is never remembered on 24 April but this year the ceremony will
fall on that day - critics say to overshadow the Armenian anniversary.
President Erdogan invited world leaders to Gallipoli, including
Armenia's president, who sent an angry rejection, calling it "an
attempt to distract attention".
Most leaders have declined the invitation.
Hakan Aslan, of the far-right MHP party, insists Turkey's history is
something to be proud of
On the shores of the Bosphorus in Istanbul, the far-right MHP party
is campaigning for the election, repeating its unrepentant line
on Armenia.
"There was no genocide," says Hakan Aslan, the party's regional head.
"All the ethnic groups who paid their taxes to the Ottoman Empire
and weren't traitors lived in peace."
None of the graves at Istanbul's Armenian cemetery dates from 1915
Meanwhile at the heart of Istanbul's Armenian cemetery lies the grave
of Sevag Balikci. A marble slab bears his name, picture and the date:
24 April 2011.
But among the surrounding graves, not a single one dates from 1915.
In fact, there is no cemetery in Turkey dedicated to those victims,
such is the refusal to mark what happened.
A sign, say Turkey's critics, of a country still unable to face
its past.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-32396080
By Mark LowenBBC News, Istanbul
9 hours ago/22/04/15
>From the sectionEurope
Sevag Balikci's family say his death was connected to the anniversary
of the massacre
Sevag Balikci never got to see his new bedroom.
His family, ethnic Armenians from Turkey, moved into their Istanbul
apartment at the start of 2011.
Sevag was finishing his military service in the south-east. On 24
April, aged 25, he was shot dead by a fellow recruit.
The judge called it an accident, sentencing the killer to four years
in prison. The family is convinced it was an intentional act by a
Turkish nationalist, timed for maximum effect.
The 24th April is the date on which Armenians commemorate the darkest
moment in their history: when - 100 years ago this week - they began
to be rounded up in a crumbling Ottoman Empire and were deported
or killed.
Armenian children at a refugee camp in 1915
Armenia says 1.5 million were systematically murdered, calling it
"genocide".
Turkey fiercely rejects the label, insisting far fewer died - many of
starvation or disease - and that the deaths of Turks have been ignored.
'The same fate'
As the centenary of the tragedy approaches, historical narratives
are colliding.
"The genocide was being commemorated and the killer wanted to
intimidate people through my son," says Ani Belakci, Sevag's mother.
"An Armenian had to die on that day - and Sevag was available.
"The authorities have leant on witnesses to change statements -
it suits them to say it's an accident."
Sevag Balikci's grave lies at the heart of Istanbul's Armenian cemetery
She shows me her son's room, which she has kept as it was.
"We can't throw out his belongings because it would be like saying
goodbye to him," she says, her tears flowing.
"A century ago, my family were killed in the genocide - and now one
of their descendants, my son, has met the same fate."
Hushed up
Armenians had long been treated as second-class citizens in the
Ottoman Empire, their sporadic revolts ruthlessly suppressed.
As World War One raged, Ottoman leaders blamed faltering national
cohesion for losses in the Balkans and elsewhere, seeing the Armenian
minority as a threat.
Armenian genocide dispute
Hundreds of thousands of Armenians died in 1915 at the hands of the
Ottoman Turks, whose empire was disintegrating Many of the victims
were civilians deported to barren desert regions where they died
of starvation and thirst. Thousands also died in massacres Armenia
says up to 1.5 million people were killed. Turkey says the number
of deaths was much smaller Most non-Turkish scholars of the events
regard them as genocide - as do more than 20 states including France,
Germany and Russia, and some international bodies such as the European
Parliament Turkey rejects the term 'genocide', maintaining that many
of the dead were killed in clashes during World War One, and that
many ethnic Turks also suffered in the conflict
Find out more about what happened
>From a pre-war Armenian population of two million, just 50,000 remain
in Turkey today.
Around 20 countries, including France, Italy and Canada, officially
recognise the killings as genocide.
But for decades Turks grew up unaware of what happened in 1915.
Textbooks omitted it; political leaders hushed it up, pursuing the
"Turkification" of society.
When it was finally talked about here, the official Turkish version
called it "the Armenian events".
But in the past decade, history classes at some universities have
begun to address the period and a small liberal fringe has spoken out.
Professor Ahmet Insel says Turkey has a moral obligation to recognise
the tragedy as "genocide"
Three hundred Turkish intellectuals signed a petition asking Armenia
for forgiveness, among them Ahmet Insel, a professor at Galatasaray
University.
"This was a genocide and a crime against humanity," he says, standing
outside the Islamic Arts museum in Istanbul, the site where the first
Armenians were rounded up.
"Turkey has a moral obligation to recognise it as such, so as to
become a civilised modern democracy."
He says he does not expect formal recognition within the next 10 years.
"The charge of genocide could mean Armenians claim financial
compensation from Turkey - that's one factor holding it back."
Rhetoric hardened
The current government has slowly moved forward on the issue, returning
some confiscated properties to Armenians.
And, last year, the then Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan - now
President - offered his "condolences" to families of the victims,
calling the killings "inhumane".
It was the furthest a political leader had gone in Turkey, but was
rejected by Armenia for dodging the word "genocide".
In the run-up to the centenary, the rhetoric has again hardened.
The president is keen to maintain support among nationalists ahead
of the election
When Pope Francis said two weeks ago that Armenians had suffered "the
first genocide of the 20th Century" Mr Erdogan hit back, saying he
"condemned" the Pope, warning him not to "repeat the mistake".
Partly the president is shoring up core nationalist votes ahead of an
election in June. But partly too, Turkey, which cares so much for its
prestige and strongman image, recoils at a word linked with Rwanda,
Srebrenica and Auschwitz.
'Distract attention'
Perhaps no clearer example of the reluctance to mark the killings will
come on the anniversary itself, when Turkey will instead lavishly
commemorate 100 years since the Gallipoli campaign: the victory of
Ottoman forces over invading Allied troops.
It is never remembered on 24 April but this year the ceremony will
fall on that day - critics say to overshadow the Armenian anniversary.
President Erdogan invited world leaders to Gallipoli, including
Armenia's president, who sent an angry rejection, calling it "an
attempt to distract attention".
Most leaders have declined the invitation.
Hakan Aslan, of the far-right MHP party, insists Turkey's history is
something to be proud of
On the shores of the Bosphorus in Istanbul, the far-right MHP party
is campaigning for the election, repeating its unrepentant line
on Armenia.
"There was no genocide," says Hakan Aslan, the party's regional head.
"All the ethnic groups who paid their taxes to the Ottoman Empire
and weren't traitors lived in peace."
None of the graves at Istanbul's Armenian cemetery dates from 1915
Meanwhile at the heart of Istanbul's Armenian cemetery lies the grave
of Sevag Balikci. A marble slab bears his name, picture and the date:
24 April 2011.
But among the surrounding graves, not a single one dates from 1915.
In fact, there is no cemetery in Turkey dedicated to those victims,
such is the refusal to mark what happened.
A sign, say Turkey's critics, of a country still unable to face
its past.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-32396080