Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Why Do The Influential Escape The Blame Game?

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

  • Why Do The Influential Escape The Blame Game?

    WHY DO THE INFLUENTIAL ESCAPE THE BLAME GAME?

    The National, UAE
    April 16 2015

    Alan Philps

    April 16, 2015

    In recent days, 100-year-old black-and-white images of women carrying
    infants through the desert have flashed up on the screens of news
    channels. The images are followed by more recent footage of similar
    head-scarfed women fleeing with their babies across the sand. The
    first images are shots of the expulsion of Armenians from eastern
    Turkey in 1915 during which up to 1.5 million were killed or died of
    hunger and thirst. The modern footage is of Yazidi families fleeing
    the onslaught of ISIL in Iraq last year.

    Is it fair to put these two events side by side on screen, given the
    power of images to suggest a continuum of oppression of religious and
    ethnic minorities from the First World War to today? The question
    will be hard to escape over the next week. Foreshadowing the 100th
    anniversary of the start of the Armenian deportations on April 24,
    Pope Francis lit the fuse for an explosive debate by describing the
    Armenian massacres "the first genocide of the 20th century".

    The pope is used to poking sticks into hornet's nests. The Vatican
    diplomatic service cannot have failed to be aware of the likely
    reaction in Turkey, a country recently visited by Francis and one
    where the Roman Catholic hierarchy has invested much effort in good
    relations. Turkey recalled its ambassador from the Vatican in protest.

    On Wednesday, the European Parliament passed a resolution urging Turkey
    to recognise the events of 1915 as genocide. The Turkish President,
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, responded angrily: "The stain of genocide on
    our nation is out of the question."

    This is not the place to rehearse the arguments on both sides, which
    have been aired in these pages, including by the Turkish ambassador
    today. Under Mr Erdogan the taboo on discussion of the massacres has
    been lifted, and he himself has expressed condolences to the Armenian
    victims. But there is adamant refusal to accept the term genocide
    even though the term is supported by many scholars.

    The issue for the Turks is the context of these terrible events. They
    took place during a war that caused industrial scale casualties and
    against the background of the decades-long collapse of the Ottoman
    Empire during which millions of Muslims died and were forced out of
    their homes. The Armenians were far from the only victims.

    The list of countries where genocide has been ruled by international
    courts to have taken place usually includes Nazi Germany and Rwanda,
    and in Bosnia at the hands of the Bosnian Serbs. But the powerful
    countries escape. Was not Russia guilty of genocide by deporting the
    Circassian Muslims in the 1860s from their homeland in the Caucasus,
    land where the Sochi winter Olympics were held? And what about Stalin's
    treatment of the Muslim Chechens, deported en masse from their homes
    in 1944 and left to die on the steppes of Kazakhstan? And shouldn't
    the European settlers in America be deemed guilty of genocide for
    their destruction of the native peoples?

    Americans would argue that this argument is ridiculous. After all,
    that was in the past. But when did the past stop and the present
    begin? Perhaps the line should be drawn from 1948 when the Convention
    on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide was adopted
    by the UN General Assembly.

    No one can deny that battles over other people's history are deeply
    attractive to the media and to legislatures looking for an easy vote.

    It is much easier for the European Parliament to approve a motion
    on 1915 than to tackle the tragedy unfolding in the Mediterranean,
    where thousands - Syrians, Eritreans and others - are likely to
    drown in leaky boats over the summer trying to reach Europe from
    Africa. There are no easy solutions there.

    A visitor from Mars would be shocked that countries are arguing over
    events a century ago while a real humanitarian crisis is unfolding
    along Turkey's southern border.

    Some 40 to 50 million people around the world have been forced to
    leave their homes by war, civil unrest or climate stress. What to do
    about these people and the wars that have ruined their lives is the
    real issue of our time. Who, for example, has found a way to help the
    16,000 remaining residents of the Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp on
    the outskirts of Damascus, besieged and bombed by government forces
    and then laid waste by ISIL? The UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon,
    made a desperate plea for outside intervention, describing Yarmouk
    as the "deepest circle of hell". There was not much response either
    from Arab states or the outside powers.

    Here lies the answer to why Pope Francis threw caution to the wind
    last Sunday. It is not about redress for events 100 years ago. It
    is about the future of the Christians in the Middle East at a time
    of unprecedented war and dislocation. In the past, the Vatican has
    spoken softly in defence of Christians in the region, aware that their
    position as integral parts of their communities is undermined if they
    appear to have colonial protectors. To put things in context again,
    ISIL has killed many more Muslims than Christians or Yazidis.

    That policy has not worked. Continuing war in Syria is hastening the
    exodus of Christians from the region. If the pope took his gloves
    off with Turkey, it is because of Mr Erdogan's role in the Syrian
    conflict, where he has given priority to toppling Bashar Al Assad over
    containing the jihadists of ISIL. The Vatican sees things differently -
    the triumph of ISIL would be a catastrophe.

    Raising the Armenian issue is a stick to beat Mr Erdogan with. But
    whether the western world has the right to give morality lessons in a
    region where its intervention has caused so much pain and bitterness
    is an open question.

    Alan Philps is a commentator on global affairs

    http://www.thenational.ae/opinion/comment/why-do-the-influential-escape-the-blame-game

Working...
X