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Armenian Journalist Refuses To Use The Word Genocide

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  • Armenian Journalist Refuses To Use The Word Genocide

    ARMENIAN JOURNALIST REFUSES TO USE THE WORD GENOCIDE

    http://blog.ararat-center.org/?p=327
    13 November 2009

    Los Angeles

    In the month of September the Armenian public learned of a blatant
    case of denial of the Armenian Genocide within Armenia. A court case
    was initiated by the "ARARAT" Center for Strategic Research against
    the Yerevan-based Caucasus Institute and its director Alexander
    Iskandaryan for publishing and disseminating denialist literature.

    Unfortunately, as the initiators of this court case noted during the
    press-conference, this was not the only such instance of Armenian
    Genocide denial within Armenia. Another case of such denial transpired
    recently. A journalist named Emil Danielyan, a citizen and resident
    of Armenia, in his article about Levon Ter-Petrosyan's speech before
    the Armenian National Congress leadership, intentionally refused
    to use the word genocide when referring to the Armenian Genocide
    (http://www.azatutyun.am/content/article/ 1875375.html). His expression
    of choice was the "1915 mass killings and deportations" so ubiquitous
    in English-language publications supportive of the Turkish denialist
    position. Furthermore, a news service operating in Armenia and staffed
    by Armenians, the Azatutyun radio station, published this article
    without any editing or disclaimers, assuming the responsibility of
    the content.

    The skeptic in all of us would compel us to give the author the
    benefit of doubt. Perhaps the use of the term was unintentional and
    an honest mistake or the content of the article was revised without
    the author's knowledge. Unfortunately, this is not the first time
    this author has denied the reality of the Armenian Genocide. Earlier
    in 2009 he had written another article in which he used the term
    "mass killings of Armenians." A criticism that appeared on "ARARAT"
    Center's Foreign Press Review provided an Armenian translation
    of that article and called upon the author to publicly reject
    the use of "mass killings", giving him that very benefit of doubt
    (http://artmamul.ararat-center.org/?p=161). Yet the call rang hollow
    and no explanations followed. Thus, the following two assumptions can
    reasonably be made: either Emil Danielyan consciously thinks that the
    Armenian Genocide was only a mass killing of Armenians, not genocide,
    or he does not hold that view, but is willing to ascribe to it and
    even propagandize it in his own articles, if the publisher pays the
    right price. In either case, his use of the expression "mass killings"
    is a deliberate choice.

    Impunity breeds insolence. Some suggest that openly trying people
    for denial of the Armenian Genocide in Armenia would offer fodder
    to Turkey to cast further doubt on the Genocide. They argue that if
    deniers exist even among Armenians and they are tried in Armenia,
    then there must really be questions about the veracity of the Armenian
    Genocide. Nothing could be further from the truth. We can only fool
    ourselves by not wanting to see that denial exists in Armenia. In fact,
    it is the continuous proliferation of Turkish denialist propaganda
    by unprincipled Armenians that will give Turkey more fodder for
    speculation. If some Armenians impudently doubt or even deny the
    Armenian Genocide, then foreign denialists will have a more potent
    argument in their countries. Turkey's foreign sympathizers will argue
    that if Armenians question and doubt the Genocide and their government
    does nothing, then all historical questions must not yet be settled.

    Severe punishment of all such attempts will only prove to the rest of
    the world, including the Turks, that the Armenians and their government
    are unanimous in their position and there can be no ambiguity on
    this issue. Thus, those Armenians who falsely cast doubt on the
    Armenian Genocide should be prosecuted and punished as criminals,
    because genocide denial is a criminal offense. Denial is the final
    phase of genocide.

    Had Emil Danielyan been called to account for his first article,
    he would have thought twice about insulting the Armenian nation the
    second time.
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