Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Document Reflects CUP's Deportation Policy

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Document Reflects CUP's Deportation Policy

    DOCUMENT REFLECTS CUP'S DEPORTATION POLICY

    By Ari Sekeryan on February 17, 2015

    click for more

    Special for the Armenian Weekly

    Sait Molla was a lawyer, member of the Turkish Council of State, and
    founder of the Anglophile Society (Ingiliz Muhipleri Cemiyeti). In
    1918, he began to publish a daily paper in Istanbul calledTurkce
    Ýstanbul. On March 25, 1919, the newspaper published what it claimed
    was the Letter of Instruction from the head office of the Committee
    of Union and Progress (CUP) to the Special Organization (Teþkilat-ý
    Mahsusa) units as the deportation of Armenians during the genocide
    began.

    On March 25, 1919, Turkce Ýstanbul published what it claimed was the
    Letter of Instruction from the head office of the Committee of Union
    and Progress (CUP)

    The newspaper called it "A Tragic and Dreadful Document," and noted
    it was reprinting the document without making any changes. The Letter
    of Instruction consists of 10 articles that describe the steps to
    be taken in the deportation process. These are the same steps that
    scholars like Taner Akcam, Donald Bloxham, and Uður Umit Ungor have
    described as being part of the deportations.

    Of course, the authenticity of such a document is not guaranteed.

    Turkce Istanbul neglected to mention the source of the letter.

    Moreover, the archives of the CUP disappeared following the defeat
    of the Ottoman Empire in World War I.

    Regardless of these questions, however, it is noteworthy that there
    were Ottoman Turkish dailies like Turkce Ýstanbul, Alemdar, and Peyam,
    which criticized the CUP and discussed the topic intensively in the
    wake of World War I.

    The text of the newspaper's piece follows.

    'A tragic and dreadful document'

    Article 1. Close all of the Armenian associations by using the third
    and fourth articles of the Law of Associations; arrest the executive
    members who were opposing the CUP government, deport them to provinces
    such as Mosul and Baghdad, and kill them en route or at their final
    destination.

    On March 25, 1919, Turkce Ýstanbul published what it claimed was the
    Letter of Instruction from the head office of the Committee of Union
    and Progress (CUP)

    Article 2. Collect all of the weapons of the Armenians.

    Article 3. Prepare Muslim public opinion through appropriate means,
    organize some planned incidents--like Russia did in Baku--in cities
    such as Van, Erzurum, and Adana, where the Armenians by their own
    actions have earned the hatred of the Muslims.

    Article 4. Leave the implementation totally to the general populace
    in provinces like Erzurum, Van, Mamuretulaziz, and Bitlis, and use
    the troops and military forces to appear as if they are preventing
    the massacres. On the contrary, support Muslims with military force
    in places like Adana, Sivas, Bursa, Ýzmit, and Ýzmir.

    Article 5. Apply [measures] of annihilation to school teachers and
    especially to men below 50. (Leave the women and children to be
    converted to Islam.)

    Article 6. Clear away the families of those who managed to run away and
    take measures to cut off their ties with their hometowns completely.

    Article 7. Discharge all Armenian officials from all government
    offices and branches by accusing them of spying.

    Article 8. Annihilate the men serving in the army by the military in
    an appropriate fashion.

    Article 9. Start all measures at the same time in order to leave no
    time to prepare means of defense.

    Article 10. Keep this letter of instruction private and take utmost
    care to keep it between one or two persons.

    It is a reality that those Armenians who were deported were killed
    and annihilated in accordance with the letter of instruction written
    above. While we avoid elaborating on it further, we publish the
    document exactly the same.

    Turkce Ýstanbul

    March 25, 1919

    Editor's Note: Similar documents were published in the Turkish press
    during the post-World War I years.

    http://armenianweekly.com/2015/02/17/document-reflects-cup-policy/

Working...
X