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  • The Turkish curse after a death in Istanbul

    Daily Star - Lebanon
    Jan 23 2007

    The Turkish curse after a death in Istanbul

    By Hugh Pope
    Commentary by
    Tuesday, January 23, 2007

    Is there a curse hanging over Turkey? Each time the country achieves
    sustained development, something trips it up. This time it is the
    assassination on Friday of Hrant Dink, a newspaper editor, peacemaker
    and one of Turkey's most prominent Armenians. Turkey is trying to
    rise to the challenge. Denunciations of the murder fill the airwaves,
    from the government to Islamic leaders to the army. Thousands of
    Turks marched through the streets hours after the shooting, shouting:
    "We are all Armenians, we are all Hrant Dink."

    Turkey's credibility as a future European Union member state is at
    stake. A man who confesses to pulling the trigger has been caught -
    a nationalist, by all accounts - but no murkiness must remain about
    the people and the thinking behind the killing. Hrant Dink was not just
    left unprotected by the police. Bad laws, malevolent prosecutions and
    a growing nationalist hysteria created the lynch-mob atmosphere that
    transformed the sweet-mannered Dink into a public enemy number one.

    What killed Dink, in short, is the Turkish Republic's inability
    to deal with the Armenian issue - the charge that its predecessor
    state, the Ottoman Empire, killed 1.5 million Armenian men, women
    and children in a 1915 genocide. Official Turkey is still stuck in
    a rut of denial. Efforts to open archives and to "leave it to the
    historians" lead into dead ends, partly because of intransigence in
    the Armenian diaspora, but also partly because of Turkey's anti-free
    speech laws - still extant in the form of Penal Code Article 301,
    with its catch-all penalties for "denigrating Turkishness."

    Discussing the great omissions in Turkey's public education remains
    taboo. Even as moderate a politician as Foreign Minister Abdullah
    Gul angrily rejects that there is any room for a Turkish apology.

    That's because the Turks have reasons to feel victimized themselves.

    Christian powers don't apologize much for the ethnic cleansing
    carried out during the century until 1923, during which years they
    rolled back the borders of the Ottoman Empire. American historian
    Justin McCarthy estimates 5 million Muslims were killed. In 1915,
    World War I was raging. Turkey was again under attack from Russia in
    the east and Britain and France in the west. The Armenian leadership
    openly sided with Turkey's enemies, forming anti-Ottoman militias
    and demanding a state on Ottoman land.

    Turkey also fears that an apology would trigger claims on its land
    or on seized Armenian assets. Turks cannot believe the sincerity of
    foreign parliaments who, usually ill-informed about the Turkish case,
    give in to Armenian diaspora lobbying for genocide declarations. One
    such bill looks more likely than ever to pass the US Congress in
    April. Politics often seems to trump history. Would the French
    Parliament have made it a crime last year to deny the Armenian
    genocide if an unrelated desire to keep Turkey out of the EU had not
    been prevalent?

    Some maximal views of Turkish evil by Armenians were even criticized
    by Hrant Dink. He once wrote that diaspora Armenians should spend
    their energy supporting independent Armenia and not "let hatred of
    the Turks poison their blood."

    http://www.dailystar.com.lb

    But Turkey has an attitude problem, too. Idiotically, it was the
    newspaper column mentioned above by Dink that caused him to be put on
    trial for violating Article 301, on the pretext that he had said that
    Turks were "poisonous." Why is it that, of all the Turkish authors
    charged with Article 301 offenses, only Dink actually received a
    jail sentence (six months, suspended)? Three years ago, Dink says he
    was told "something will happen to you if you continue" by officials
    working for the same Istanbul governor who now smugly suggests the
    police win a prize for their swift apprehension of the assassin. (The
    governor's office denies making any threat).

    Commentators are subtly shirking responsibility by labeling the murder
    a "provocation" or blaming "outside forces." Many expressed pain
    since Armenians were a "trust" under Turkey's protection. It took
    one of Prime Minister Reccep Tayyip Erdogan's advisers, Omer Celik,
    to point out that they were not guests and "were as much owners of
    this country as Turks are."

    Neither Turks not Armenians should go on like this. Erdogan - whose
    government was the first to grant Dink's simple request for a Turkish
    passport - could try a grand gesture. The prime minister might open the
    border with Armenia, closed since the early 1990s. He could advocate
    an international conference, where Turkey could argue its case that
    there was no centralized attempt to wipe out the Armenian race. After
    all, Turkey already officially accepts that 300,000 died.

    Recent years have also seen brave Turkish novels, films, exhibitions
    and academic conferences that addressed the gaping loss to Turkish
    society represented by the Armenian disappearance. Best of all,
    Erdogan could abolish Article 301, which made all intellectuals like
    Dink a target. What debate can there be if Turkey drags anyone who
    deviates from the official line into court?

    None of this, however, is likely to happen. Turkey has presidential
    and parliamentary elections this year, and ultra-nationalists pose
    the main challenge to Erdogan's centrist, pro-Islamic Justice and
    Development Party. Europe - whose support is critical in making a
    Turkish regime feel safe to reform - seems in no mood to extend lines
    of political credit to Turkey.

    So the gap between Turkey and Europe will widen again. Muddled thinking
    and inward-looking nationalism will continue to plague Turkey, and
    not only in its approach to the Armenian problem. After all, Dink's
    murder is the symptom of negative currents that persist, not their
    cause. And that, of course, is why Turkey's curse keeps returning to
    strike with such tragic ease.

    Hugh Pope is an Istanbul-based journalist. His latest book is "Sons
    of the Conquerors: The Rise of the Turkic World" (Overlook Duckworth
    2005). This commentary was written for THE DAILY STAR.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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