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EU membership inconceivable while Turkey denies murders of Armenians

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  • EU membership inconceivable while Turkey denies murders of Armenians

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    EU membership inconceivable while Turkey refuses to
    face up to mass murders of Armenians
    26.01.2007 17:51 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The impasse in Turkey's EU accession talks has
    whipped up xenophobia. Brussels says that despite major reforms to
    entrench human, democratic and minority rights, Ankara has not done
    enough to protect freedom of expression or subordinate the army to
    civilian control, reports The Financial Times. Turkey's neo-Islamist
    government says the Europeans are acting in bad faith, raising the bar
    to entry ever higher to pander to anti-Muslim prejudice, particularly
    in France, Germany and Austria. Both are right. But there are,
    nevertheless, rightly unalterable membership criteria. No country with
    a penal code that makes it a crime to "denigrate Turkishness" (Article
    301) will meet them. European membership is also inconceivable while
    Turkey refuses to face up to the mass murders of Armenians as the
    Ottoman Empire crumbled during the First World War.

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Prime Minister, has called for reputable
    historians to establish the truth, confident this would place the
    killings within a conflict in which millions of Turks also perished as
    western powers dismembered Ottoman territory. Yet for generations
    there has been nothing but silence or denial. Rare conferences to
    discuss these terrible events have been cancelled after pressure from
    the army-dominated nationalist establishment. Turkey closed its
    borders with Armenia in 1993.

    Critically, nationalist cabals have used Article 301 to silence
    writers and intellectuals who have dared to raise the Armenian tragedy
    and ask whether it was centrally directed genocide. Mr Dink himself
    was given a suspended jail sentence and Orhan Pamuk, the Nobel
    prize-winning novelist was also dragged to court (where yesterday he
    was publicly threatened by a well-known extremist who prosecutors say
    provided the gun that killed Mr Dink). Mr Erdogan has reacted forcibly
    to Hrant Dink's murder and made gestures of reconciliation towards the
    Armenians. It is unrealistic to expect more ahead of fiercely
    contested elections this year. But Turkey must demonstrate its
    commitment to free speech by repealing Article 301, not only a
    mechanism for exacerbating ultranationalism but evidently an
    incitement to murder too. Once the elections are over, Turks and
    Armenians need to move towards a public reckoning with history, the
    newspaper says.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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