Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Al-Jazeera: Film tackles 'genocide' controversy

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

  • Al-Jazeera: Film tackles 'genocide' controversy

    Aljazeera.net, Qatar
    Jan 21 2007

    Film tackles 'genocide' controversy
    By Kris Evans in Los Angeles

    http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/1BFFED4A-4 BEE-45C2-BA33-3A0F63B4E3A9.htm


    Serj Tankian, right, the lead singer of System of a Down
    has condemned the Armenian genocide [Getty]

    The killing of Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist who
    publicised the killing of hundreds of thousands of Armenians at the
    turn of the 20th century, is likely to turn a spotlight on a dark
    period of Turkish history.

    Many Armenians say the killings, perpetrated in the twilight years of
    the Ottoman Empire between 1915-17, were deliberate acts of genocide.

    Turkey however says the Armenians died in mass communal violence, and
    that many Turks also died in the violence.

    Dink's murder on the streets of Istanbul comes only days before the
    release of a documentary by a Pulitzer prize-winning author who
    teamed up with a rock band to raise awareness of the issue.

    Carla Garabedian, an American film maker and former war
    correspondent, is trying to pressure Western governments to
    acknowledge that the killing of more than a million Armenians during
    the break up of the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923 was an act
    of genocide.

    The US government, however, refuses to use the "g" word, as do the
    governments of the UK and Turkey (Amnesty International states that
    while the killings are a matter of fact, calling them genocide is a
    matter of legal opinion).

    The film Screamers is likely to raise the ire of those in Turkey who
    argue that Ottoman citizens - Armenian and Turkish - died in great
    numbers during the final days of the empire, and who characterise the
    deaths as part of a much larger war.


    Head banging politics

    "Whether the deaths of Armenians or Muslims constitute genocide or
    some other no less horrific crime, or no crime at all, should be
    studied and openly debated by both sides"

    Gunay Evinch, a Turkish-American Fulbright Scholar in international
    law

    Garabedian's previous work includes the Emmy-award winning Beneath
    the Veil, about women in Afghanistan, and Dying for the President, a
    film during which she risked her life to sneak into Chechnya during
    the height of the conflict there.

    Now she has teamed up with System of a Down, a Los Angeles-based
    metal band who are all of Armenian descent, two of which were born in
    Lebanon and known in the record industry for embracing political and
    human rights issues.

    The documentary is interlaced with concert footage as well as
    interviews with Turkish dissidents, intellectuals, and Samantha
    Power, a Pulitzer-prize winning writer, whose book A Problem from
    Hell: America and the Age of Genocide, was Garabedian's inspiration
    for the film.

    But it is unlikely that the film, already being shown in Los Angeles
    and opening in New York on January 26, will be screened in Turkey any
    time soon.


    Open debate

    Gunay Evinch, a Turkish-American Fulbright Scholar in international
    law, says: "Whether the deaths of Armenians or Muslims constitute
    genocide or some other no less horrific crime, or no crime at all,
    should be studied and openly debated by both sides.

    "I also believe that the question of whether a crime has been
    committed is a legal inquiry in which historians should serve as
    expert witnesses."

    Evinch and numerous other Turkish scholars argue that while, for
    example, the Jewish Holocaust was the very definition of genocide -
    and proven so in court - the Armenian issue is more complex.


    System of a Down feature heavily in the
    film and are political campaigners [EPA]
    They also point to the strength of the Armenian lobby (both sides
    like to highlight the other's lobbying power), and argue that
    Armenians and their supporters are opposed to a court determination
    because a "public relations approach" is more likely to bring about a
    conviction.


    And if there were a court case?

    Evinch says: "My own opinion is that Turkey would win the case on the
    merits, and that all who seek the truth should explore the ICJ
    [International Court of Justice] option."


    No more debate

    "We think we have a policy of 'never again' - never again will we let
    the Holocaust happen. But we let genocide happen underneath our
    noses"

    Carla Garabedian, film maker

    But for the director of Screamers, the moment for debate and
    discussion has long since passed.

    "Had they wanted me to have a debate on it, I wouldn't have taken
    part. I just don't think you can be even handed about something like
    genocide."

    Consensus may never be reached between the two sides (although
    letters have recently been exchanged between the Turkish and Armenian
    premiers with regard to a joint study), but the documentary also
    explores the West's reaction, or non-reaction, to events in Darfur,
    Rwanda and Halabja (a Kurdish town in north Iraq where thousands of
    Kurds were gassed in 1988).

    On this point, Garabedian says it's no longer about Turkey but "about
    us [in the West] and our foreign policy".

    She said: "We think we have a policy of 'never again' - never again
    will we let the Holocaust happen. But we let genocide happen
    underneath our noses, we know exactly what's going on and we have
    made a decision we're going to allow it to happen."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X