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  • Making difficult situations worse

    The Guardian, UK
    Oct 12 2007


    Making difficult situations worse


    Leader
    Friday October 12, 2007
    The Guardian


    Outside Turkey there is a broad consensus that the massacre and
    forced deportations of more than a million Armenians in the latter
    years of the Ottoman empire were nothing less than genocide. Last
    year France voted to make it a crime to deny that, and on Wednesday a
    US congressional panel approved a bill describing the massacres as
    genocide. But the country where this debate matters most is Turkey -
    and officially it continues to claim that as many Turks as Armenians
    died in the civil unrest of the crumbling empire. The real test of
    the vote by the US house committee on foreign affairs is whether or
    not a Turkish reassessment of the events of 1917 is likely to happen.

    The issue is not just a lightning rod for nationalists, but a litmus
    test for the human-rights agenda on which EU entry talks depend. The
    Nobel prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk was prosecuted under article
    301, a law that makes insulting the republic punishable by up to
    three years in prison. He had said in an interview with a Swiss
    newspaper that the Armenian massacres and the killings of over 30,000
    Kurds in the 1990s were taboo topics in Turkey. A Turkish-Armenian
    journalist, Hrant Dink, was shot dead outside his newspaper in
    January for saying the killings were genocide; he had been prosecuted
    under article 301, and yesterday his son Aram received a suspended
    sentence under the same law. The US vote is unlikely to make it
    easier for Turkey's president, Abdullah Gul, to amend article 301, as
    he would wish; in fact it will reinforce nationalist support for it.
    The tangled web of cause and effect does not stop there. Turkey has
    yet to respond to attacks by the Kurdistan Workers' party (PKK) which
    have killed 15 soldiers and 12 civilians in the past 10 days. There
    are about 3,000 PKK guerrillas, many operating from camps in the
    Qandil mountains in Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq, and the US is
    desperate to stop a Turkish incursion. Ankara says that if neither
    the leadership in Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq nor the US is able
    to curb the PKK, its troops will. The prime minister, Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, succumbed this week to months of pressure from the army
    chief of staff, agreeing that cross-border raids may have to happen.
    Should they do so, the stability of the only area of Iraq untouched
    by civil war would be under threat.

    Mr Erdogan is a moderate on the Armenian and Kurdish questions, but
    he knows that Turkish support for US regional policy is a house of
    cards waiting to collapse. The US Democrats may hope to pick up easy
    votes from the Armenian diaspora for their own election battles in
    2008. But they should bear in mind that more than just domestic
    politics are at stake: another country's people is looking on.
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