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Turkey's wilful forgetting

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  • Turkey's wilful forgetting

    Age, Australia
    April 28 2005


    Turkey's wilful forgetting
    April 29, 2005

    If Turkey wants to be part of the EU it must be prepared to face up
    to its history.

    'Who remembers today the Armenians?" Adolf Hitler is reputed to have
    said as he prepared to invade Poland. Ninety years after the killing
    of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War I
    many people do still remember - most of all the descendants of those
    who were murdered. In April 1915 Turkish soldiers arrested hundreds
    of Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople,
    then tortured and executed them. The Ottoman authorities then ordered
    the mass expulsion of Armenians from eastern Anatolia, where they
    were suspected of working with Russia to create a separate state. The
    slaughter of Armenians continued over the next several years.
    Terrible atrocities were carried out, even against children. This has
    become known as the first genocide of the 20th century. What has kept
    bitterness alive is Turkey's insistence that no genocide ever took
    place, although it admits many thousands of people died as a result
    of "civil strife".

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    AdvertisementNow the Armenians are seeking international recognition
    that their people were victims of a deliberate campaign of
    extermination. One thing gives hope they might achieve this: Turkey's
    desire to become part of the European Union. France, which is one of
    15 countries to recognise the Armenian genocide, has called on Turkey
    to set the record straight before it can join the EU. The Turkish
    Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has recently proposed a joint
    Turkish and Armenian commission to investigate the genocide claims.
    The proposal is welcome, even though its critics say most of the
    incriminating evidence has been expunged from the Turkish archives.

    Turkey has been guilty of wilful amnesia. Germany has managed to
    reinstate itself as a responsible international citizen because of
    its recognition of, and contrition for, its Nazi past. Japan is
    belatedly realising the importance of properly apologising for its
    wartime atrocities. Turkey wants to be seen as moderate and
    progressive, fit to be part of Europe, and to that end it has
    instituted significant social and human rights reforms. But if it is
    to be permitted to join the EU it must be prepared to own up to its
    past. As history shows, victims do not forget, and forgiveness is not
    possible before an acknowledgement of the wrongs committed.
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