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Univ. visiting professor is victim of campaign of intimidation

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  • Univ. visiting professor is victim of campaign of intimidation

    Minneapolis Star Tribune , MN
    Feb 22 2007


    U visiting professor is victim of campaign of intimidation
    Last update: February 21, 2007 - 9:15 PM

    What's new: Taner Akçam, an expert on the Armenian genocide and a
    visiting professor at the University of Minnesota's Center for
    Holocaust and Genocide Studies, was detained in Montreal by Canadian
    customs officials Friday. He was held for more than four hours while
    officials investigated a charge of terrorism leveled against him by
    unknown persons.
    What happened: Akçam had been invited to speak at a human-rights
    symposium at McGill University Law School. A Canadian customs officer
    showed him copies of reviews of his new book on the Armenian tragedy,
    "A Shameful Act," from Wikipedia.com and Amazon.com that said Akçam
    was a member of a terrorist organization.

    The outcome: While being questioned, Akçam was contacted on his cell
    phone by his host, McGill professor Payam Akhavan, when he failed to
    pass customs. Akhavan called the office of Jason Kenney, secretary of
    state for multiculturalism, and Stockwell Day, the minister of public
    safety. Akçam's release followed almost immediately.

    Not the first time: Akçam, who is a Turk, believes this was part of
    "a campaign against me by the Turkish authorities" for speaking out
    on the Armenian genocide. "When I was at New York University recently
    as part of my book tour, the autograph session was broken up by
    Turkish nationalists. They distributed a flier labeling me a
    terrorist and claiming that I was responsible for the deaths of
    Americans in Turkey."

    The same thing happened in December at the Benjamin N. Cardozo Law
    School in New York, but with a twist. When e-mails suggested the same
    group was going to break up a conference on genocide and law, the
    sponsors called the Turkish Consulate in Manhattan to complain. The
    next day, Akçam said, a consular official called Cardozo to say there
    would be no demonstration. There wasn't.

    The fallout: Akçam said that because of the campaign of intimidation
    against him he is fearful for his life when he travels outside the
    United States. "I have been forced to cancel five international
    appearances at academic conferences," he said. "Under the guise of
    freedom of speech, certain groups are causing me great physical and
    material harm. It is very difficult to do my work."


    MICHAEL J. BONAFIELD

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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