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  • Prof. Dadrian Lectures On Legal Aspects Of The Armenian Genocide In

    PROF. DADRIAN LECTURES ON LEGAL ASPECTS OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN SOUTH AMERICA

    AZG Armenian Daily
    10/01/2008

    National Interests

    There has been significant activity regarding Armenian Genocide
    recognition in South America lately. This has involved governmental
    agencies, human rights organizations, parliamentarians, journalists,
    lawyers and university students.

    As late as November 19, 2007, deputies from Argentina,
    Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay-all members of the South American
    Parliamentarians' coalition known as MERCOSUR-adopted a resolution
    recognizing and condemning the Armenian Genocide at a meeting
    held in Montevideo. MERCOSUR, established in 1986, is the largest
    intergovernmental organisation in South America. The Senate of Chile
    also recognized and condemned the Armenian Genocide in June, 2007.

    In this vein, a major international conference, "The Armenian
    Genocide: History and Present Day," was held in Montevideo at the same
    time. Organized by the Uruguay Armenia Cultural Association (ASCUA),
    the Political Science Institute (UDELAR), and the Human Rights
    Program (CLAEH), the conference was co-sponsored by the University
    of Montevideo, the Ministry of Education and Culture, the Ministry
    of Tourism, the Press Association of Uruguay, the Municipality of
    Montevideo, Amnesty International-Uruguay Section, and the Embassy of
    the Republic of Armenia. Zoryan participated by sending its Director
    of Genocide Research, Prof. Vahakan N. Dadrian to speak at this and
    another conference in Buenos Aires.

    Similarly, another conference was organized in Buenos Aires by
    the Luisa Hairabedian Foundation, which is a group dedicated to the
    preservation of universal human rights, with a special interest in the
    Armenian Genocide. The three Masters of Ceremonies were all alumni of
    the university program run by the International Institute for Genocide
    and Human Rights Studies (A Division of the Zoryan Institute),
    held annually in Toronto in partnership with the University of
    Minnesota. This event was attended by university and middle school
    students, lawyers, historians, sociologists, anthropologists and a
    large number of members of the Armenian community in Argentina.

    Owing to the interest in the Armenian Genocide, and particularly
    its legal aspects, Prof. Vahakn N. Dadrian, Director of Research
    at the Zoryan Institute, shed light on these subjects. His work
    was particularly interesting to The Luisa Hairabedian Foundation,
    which is currently engaged in a unique legal procedure in Argentine
    law regarding a "truth trial" on the Armenian Genocide. Instituted
    as a method to uncover the truth about the human rights abuses of
    Argentina's recent past, especially the "Forced Disappearances," truth
    trials do not require the prosecution of a defendant. The Federal
    Court has accepted the case and sanctioned the initiation of legal
    proceedings. The lawyers involved are assembling materials, including
    a mass of authentic and verifiable official documents, for which they
    are receiving assistance from Prof. Dadrian and the Zoryan Institute.

    Prof. Dadrian's presentation in Montevideo was on the conflict between
    the near-universal recognition of the Armenian Genocide and its
    persistent denial by past and present Turkish officials. His analysis,
    summarised below, suggests that Turkish denial will not cease because
    of foreign pressure on the Turkish government, but rather only by
    pressure from the Turkish population itself, who, as part of their
    democratic movement, will require the state to recognise its own
    falsifications of history and remove its limitations on the freedom
    of speech and conscience.

    Prof. Dadrian outlined the specific components of the denial syndrome
    and explained its underlying motives and reasons. He highlighted the
    enormous problems modern Turkey would face should its leaders decide
    to recognize the historical reality of the Armenian Genocide. At the
    very least, any government daring to do so could hardly expect to
    survive. The risks for Turkey of recognizing the Armenian Genocide
    transcend the economic issues of reparations and land claims.

    Given the critical role some of the founders of the modern Republic of
    Turkey played in the organization of the Genocide, such revelations
    bear directly upon the very genesis of the republic and hence the
    issue of the current regime's integrity. The launching and sustaining
    of the blockade against Armenia and the total absence of diplomatic
    ties are conditions that accentuate these pitfalls. Under these tense
    circumstances, Armenia will remain at grave risk-with or without
    Russian protection.

    Notwithstanding, the historicity of the Genocide, argued Dr. Dadrian,
    is beyond any legitimate dispute.

    This fact is attested by the series of criminal trials the post-war
    Turkish Military Tribunal instituted in the 1919-21 period. The Key
    Indictment that charged the leaders of the Ottoman government, as well
    as top young Turk Ittihadist leaders with the crime of a centrally
    organized mass murder against the Armenians, incorporates dozens of
    secret documents, and many cipher telegrams, ordering the destruction
    of the deportee convoys. What is so extraordinary about this line of
    legal documentation is the fact that the prosecution and the Chief
    Judges of the Military Tribunal employed a two-track procedure to
    ensure the validity of the documentation. First, the documents were
    carefully examined by competent officials of the Ministries of Justice
    and the Interior, who marked their authenticity with a stamp. Second,
    before taking the witness stand, the high ranking party officials and
    Cabinet Ministers were asked to inspect the documents bearing their
    signatures and verify their authenticity. This two-tier procedure of
    authentication of key wartime documents served to ensure ironclad
    utilization of prima-facie official evidence. This is exactly the
    same procedure adopted at Nuremberg, where Nazi criminals were tried
    and convicted some two dozen years later.

    The rapid ascendancy of the Kemalist insurgent movement in the end
    served to jettison, however, the completion of the courts martial
    and to even effectively help invalidate many of the verdicts and
    sentences renditions. Nevertheless, the massive legal documentation
    of the wartime crime of genocide against the Armenian citizens of the
    Ottoman Empire is on record and is indelibly ensconced in the serial
    Annexes of Takvim-i Vekâyi, the official gazette of the Ottoman
    Parliament- despite the resolute effort of Turkish authorities to
    collect and remove them from circulation and access.

    The next day, Dadrian delivered a public lecture on the topic of "The
    Significance of the Ottoman-Turkish Official Documents Dealing with
    the Armenian Genocide." The final plenary session featured the Deputy
    Foreign Minister of Uruguay who delivered a paper discussing the global
    ramification of genocide today, in which she made reference to the
    devastating consequences attached to the impunity that characterizes
    the present status of the World War I Armenian Genocide.

    In Buenos Aires, Dadrian spoke on "The Armenian Genocide and
    International Criminal Law." This lecture argued the linkage between
    the World War I Armenian Genocide core issue of "crimes against
    humanity," which term the Allies for the first time formally and
    officially introduced when denouncing that act of genocide, and the
    Nuremberg doctrine. This central issue of intent and governmental
    complicity was an integral component in the conception and organization
    of the crime.

    The Argentinean publisher, Imago Mundi, will come out in April with
    a Spanish translation of Dadrian's classic book, The History of
    the Armenian Genocide, which is already available in French, Greek,
    Italian, and Russian. Prof. Dadrian and Prof. Taner Akcam, renowned
    Turkish Sociologist and Historian, are publishing the results of their
    collaborative archival research on the only official record of the
    military tribunals prosecuting the Armenian Genocide, found in the
    Takvim-i Vekâyi, in Turkish. The work contains translation of the
    original trial documents and argues many of the points Prof. Dadrian
    presented in his South American lectures.

    The Zoryan Institute, co-publisher of Genocide Studies and Prevention:
    An International Journal and Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational
    Studies

    --Boundary_(ID_E39d9VCTSAVt IJWVYccewA)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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