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Speakers on Campus: Cutting the Istan-bull

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  • Speakers on Campus: Cutting the Istan-bull

    McGill Tribune
    Speakers on Campus: Cutting the Istan-bull
    Scholar to challenge denial of genocide
    Tom Quail
    Posted: 2/13/07

    Genocide has been at the forefront of the news recently and Taner
    Akcam's book, A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question
    of Turkish Responsibility, exposes the author's views on the event
    that, according to him, saw the forcible removal, deportatin and
    slaughter of roughly 1.5 million Armenians by the Turkish people in
    1915.

    What he claims to be the first genocide of the twentieth century
    continues to rip at the social fabric and pluralism within modern
    Turkey. It has been likened to the Holocaust, but Akcam says the
    differing factor is the accountability of those involved in the
    genocide. Turkey has not accepted blame for the Armenian Genocide and
    some Turkish scholars are standing up and calling for the Turkish
    government to redeem the past through historical justice.

    Akcam, an ethnic Turk, was imprisoned in 1976 for collaborating on a
    student journal in Ankara. He escaped to Germany, where he became an
    Amnesty International political prisoner of conscience and completed
    his studies. He has committed much of his academic energy to
    addressing the genocide, publishing two comprehensive pieces of
    literature on the topic.

    The event is hosted by the Centre for Human Rights and Legal
    Pluralism and presented by the Zoryan Institute and the Armenian
    Student Association of McGill. The Centre, attached to the faculty of
    law, is involved with inter-disciplinary research in human rights law
    and feels that Akcam's book is the most comprehensive within
    available literature. Law Professor Frédéric Mégret believes this
    event to be of great significance.

    "What's important is that it is coming from within," Mégret said.
    "It's no longer simply Armenian intellectuals or the International
    community. It's not human rights or NGOs, it's not U.S. scholars.
    It's coming from people who are part of the Turkish establishment."

    With an increased global interest in human rights and the European
    Union's decision on Turkey's potential accession, Turkey might be
    forced to deal with these calls for recognition, despite an amendment
    to the penal code two years ago and hostility between the Turkish
    government and these scholars.

    In 2005, the Turkish government implemented a new article into its
    penal code known as "Insulting Turkishness." Article 301 has now
    placed many of these outspoken scholars, including novelist and Nobel
    Laureate Orham Pamuk and Akcam, under investigation.

    "These eminent Turks would argue that the greatest insult to
    'Turkishness' is the continuing denial of this historical tragedy
    which brutally ripped Turkey's multiethnic fibre apart," said Dr.
    Payam Akhavan, a former UN War Crimes Prosecutor and McGill professor
    of international law.

    "The event is being held because recognition of the 1915 Armenian
    genocide is a matter of considerable historical and moral
    importance," Akhavan said. "Professor Akcam's book is one of the most
    significant scholarly works on the subject."


    Akcam will be speaking in the Moot Court in the Chancellor Day Law
    building on Feb. 16 at 5:00 p.m. More information can be found
    through the Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism at
    hrwg.mcgill.ca.
    ------------------------------------------------- ---------------------

    © Copyright 2007 The McGill Tribune

    http://www.mcgilltribune.com/home/index.cfm?even t=displayArticle&ustory_id=d64e48a6-b7b1-4e42- b3dc-2989f877cb88
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