Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Britain Sidesteps Armenian Genocide Recognition A Century After Kill

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

  • Britain Sidesteps Armenian Genocide Recognition A Century After Kill

    BRITAIN SIDESTEPS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION A CENTURY AFTER KILLINGS

    Foreign Office documents show a need to emphasise suffering in 1915
    massacres but to continue policy of avoiding the G-word to avoid
    angering Turkey

    Banner depicting "Tools of Genocide" forming the shape of "1915",
    in reference to the year of the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks, in Yerevan. Photograph: David Mdzinarishvili/REUTERS

    Ian Black

    @ian_black

    Thursday 23 April 2015 15.52 BST

    Armenia and its tragic history has had an intensive blast of media
    coverage in the run-up to the April 24 centenary of what is now widely
    - though not universally - referred to as the genocide of 1915.

    Presidents Vladimir Putin and Francois Hollande will be in Yerevan
    representing Russia and France, the two most important countries
    to have risked Turkey's wrath and use the G-word with reference to
    the mass deportations and killings in the final days of the Ottoman
    Empire. The US, which also does not use it, is sending the Treasury
    Secretary, Jack Lew. Britain will be represented by John Whittingdale,
    the Conservative chairman of the all party committee on Armenia.

    Analysis The Armenian genocide - the Guardian briefing

    Turkey has never accepted the term genocide, even though historians
    have demolished its denial of responsibility for up to 1.5 million
    deaths

    No disrespect intended to Whittingdale, to the UK ambassador to Armenia
    or to the Bishop of London, who will also be there. But the level
    of UK representation is far below that of the three other permanent
    members of the UN security council. Another point of comparison
    is that the Prince of Wales is leading the UK delegation to the
    Gallipoli centenary commemoration on the same day. And the date for
    that, Armenians believe, was chosen deliberately by the Turks - long
    loyal Nato allies - to overshadow their own event at the Genocide
    Memorial in Yerevan.

    Britain's position on genocide recognition is not new. But documents
    released under the freedom of information act - though heavily redacted
    - shed light on an internal government debate 18 months ago about
    whether its policy should change. The outcome of the discussion -
    apparently between the embassy in Yerevan and the minister for Europe
    in London - was to continue the policy while taking a "forward-leaning"
    stance on participation in commemoration events.

    "But we should ensure that this is not mis-read as lack of recognition
    (in the wider sense) of the appalling events of 1915-16," the anonymous
    official commented. "It would be right to participate more actively
    in 2015 centenary events, as well as continue efforts to promote
    reconciliation." The foreign office declined to say whether the
    presence of Whittingdale and co. indeed represented more active
    involvement.

    Ironically, back in May 1915, when the horrors of Armenian suffering
    in wartime eastern Anatolia were being extensively reported, Britain,
    with its French and Russian allies, condemned what they called a
    "crime against humanity" - then a novel phrase. The modern position,
    however, is that it is not up to governments to decide what constitutes
    genocide. "The UK recognises as genocide only those events that have
    been found so by international courts (eg, Holocaust, Srebrenica,
    Rwanda) and this needs to dictate our approach on recognition," the
    document notes. That view has been robustly challenged by Geoffrey
    Robertson, QC, whose arguments apparently galvanised the FCO into
    this internal discussion.

    Another option was considered in 2013: to follow Russia, France and
    others and recognise the Armenian massacres as genocide - given the
    May 1915 statement and the preamble to the 1948 UN convention on
    genocide. That would "be received positively by both the Armenian
    government and the UK diaspora," the document noted. It added:
    "However, this would be a significant and far-reaching change in
    HMG policy." Tantalisingly, the next sentence has been redacted. So
    bizarrely, there is no mention of Turkey at all. Another FCO document
    on the issue, which reports on the decision of the Swedish parliament
    to adopt the G-word in 2010, refers to the "drastic effect" on
    relations between Stockholm and Ankara, including the cancellation
    of a visit by the then Turkish prime minister and now, president, Recep

Working...
X