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  • Tackling The Turkish Taboo

    TACKLING THE TURKISH TABOO
    Robert Ellis

    guardian.co.uk
    Wednesday 29 April 2009 19.30 BST

    Public discussion of the Armenian genocide is still risky, but signs
    that Ankara is softening its stance are encouraging

    Last December, about 200 Turkish academics and journalists challenged
    a longstanding Turkish taboo when they launched a petition on the
    internet apologising for "the Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman
    Armenians were subjected to in 1915". To date 30,000 have signed
    the petition.

    The reaction was twofold. The Turkish president, Abdullah Gul, who
    had earlier attended a World Cup qualifying match between Turkey and
    Armenia in Yerevan, said that being able to discuss every opinion was
    the policy of the state. The prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    on the other hand, said there was no need to apologise because Turkey
    had not committed a crime.

    In a further move, Canan Aritman, the Izmir deputy for the opposition
    Republican People's party, accused the president's mother of being
    Armenian, and when Gul explained that both sides of his family were
    Muslim and Turkish, she demanded a DNA test. A defamation lawsuit
    followed which resulted in the president being awarded a symbolic 1
    Turkish lira (50p).

    Inevitably, after a complaint that the website campaign had violated
    article 301 of the Turkish penal code for "public denigration of the
    Turkish nation", the Ankara public prosecutor's office investigated
    the20 matter. The conclusion, surprisingly, was that there was
    no need for a criminal prosecution on the grounds that opposing
    opinions are also protected under freedom of thought in democratic
    societies. However, the high criminal court annulled this ruling and
    the issue is still pending.

    In recent years, a number of high-profile cases in Turkey have
    illustrated the fact that public discussion of the events of 1915 is
    still fraught with risk. Three years ago, the Nobel prize winner Orhan
    Pamuk was prosecuted for stating in an interview with a Swiss daily
    that "30,000 Kurds and a million Armenians were killed in these lands
    and nobody but me dares to talk about it". The charge was dropped on
    a technicality but it transpired that an ultranationalist gang was
    trying to raise 2m lira to get someone to kill him.

    Another Turkish novelist, Elif Å~^afak, was also prosecuted under
    article 301 because a character in her novel The Bastard of Istanbul
    had raised the issue of the Armenian genocide, but the charge was
    ultimately dropped because of insufficient evidence. And two years
    ago, Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian editor, was murdered outside his
    office in Istanbul by a young Turkish nationalist.

    Even on an academic level this topic is controversial. Four years
    ago, scholars who organised a conference at Bosphorus University
    on the Armenian issue during the Ottoman empire were accused by
    the government's spokesman and m inister of justice, Cemil Cicek,
    of "stabbing the Turkish nation in the back". The conference was
    postponed, but after an international outcry it was finally reconvened
    at Bilgi University four months later.

    More fuel was added to the fire last November when the defence
    minister, Vecdi Gönul, on the 70th anniversary of the death of the
    founder of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, said: "If there were
    Greeks in the Aegean and Armenians in most places in Turkey today,
    would it be the same nation state?"

    But a fortnight ago the chief of the Turkish general staff, Ä°lker
    BaÅ~_bug, in a keynote speech reminded his audience that Ataturk
    had said it was the people of Turkey, without ethnic and religious
    distinction, who had founded the Republic of Turkey. If he had spoken
    of the Turkish people, that would be an ethnic definition.

    Both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton pledged to recognise the Armenian
    genocide to garner the substantial Armenian-American vote during
    their presidential campaigns, but now geopolitical reality has set
    in. On Obama's visit to Turkey at the beginning of this month, the
    US president maintained that his views on the incidents of 1915 had
    not changed and in his statement last Friday on Armenian Remembrance
    Day he reiterated that stance.

    However, without using the dreaded g-word, Obama instead spoke of
    "one of the great atrocities of the 20th century" and " Meds Yeghern"
    - the Armenian for the "Great Catastrophe". His goal was still "a
    full, frank and just acknowledgement of the facts" and he strongly
    supported efforts by the Turkish and Armenian people to work through
    their painful history in an honest, open and constructive manner.

    While trying to manoeuvre between a rock and a hard place, Obama
    was met with criticism from both sides. The chairman of the Armenian
    National Committee of America expressed his "sharp disappointment"
    and Erdogan called Obama's remarks "an unacceptable interpretation
    of history".

    Nine months after Dink was murdered, his son Arant Dink and another
    Turkish-Armenian journalist received suspended sentences of one
    year's imprisonment for using the term genocide. The Turkish court in
    its judgment stated: "Talk about genocide, both in Turkey and other
    countries, unfavourably affects national security and the national
    interest."

    After the first world war, the treaty of Sèvres in 1920 was the
    instrument by which the victorious allies dismembered Ottoman Turkey
    and divided the spoils among themselves. It was only after the Turkish
    war of independence and a heroic struggle under the leadership of
    Ataturk that the treaty of Lausanne (1923) established the borders
    of modern Turkey.

    The Armenian diaspora is also responsible for Turkey's fears of
    partition.

    In December 2007, journalist Harut Sasunian, a prominent member of
    the Armenian community in the US, said the ultimate objective of
    Armenians was to get recognition of their genocide claims and to
    obtain territory and compensation from Turkey.

    According to the prominent Turkish historian Taner Akcam, "Turkey
    needs to stop treating the discussion of history as a category of
    crime". Perhaps the rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia and the
    agreement on a "roadmap" to normalise ties will one day lead to that.
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