Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: An Open Letter To US President Barack Obama

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

  • ANKARA: An Open Letter To US President Barack Obama

    AN OPEN LETTER TO US PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA

    Hurriyet
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n .php?n=an-open-letter-to-us-president-barack-obama -2010-04-20
    April 20 2010
    Turkey

    Dear Mr. President,

    It would not be an exaggerated statement if I say that your
    exceptionally impressive speech to the Turkish Grand National Assembly
    on April 6, 2009, captured the hearts and minds of the Turkish people.

    This speech, and the other statements you made during your visit,
    left a deep imprint on Turkish public opinion, conveying the belief
    that you look at the world and Turkey with goodwill and without
    adverse prejudices.

    Unfortunately, the subsequent statement that you made April 24
    regarding the events of 1915 in eastern Anatolia seriously disappointed
    the Turkish people and cast a shadow on the positive impression formed
    during your visit. Although your statement omitted the highly charged
    word "genocide," you twice employed the expression "metz yeghern"
    (Meds Yeghern), which is the exact translation of "genocide" in the
    Armenian language.

    Furthermore, the statement said, "Each year, we pause to remember the
    1.5 million Armenians who were subsequently massacred or marched to
    death in the final days of the Ottoman Empire." Thereby, in effect,
    it reprised the expression "Armenian genocide" that you used frequently
    during your election campaign.

    Mr. President, in addition to being a world statesman of the first
    rank, you are also justifiably regarded as a distinguished scholar
    of law, having graduated from the world-renown Harvard Law School and
    having taught law as a senior lecturer at a prominent university. In
    light of these qualifications, we are particularly perplexed by your
    characterizations of historically controversial events that took
    place 95 years ago in terms that are incompatible with the universal
    principles of law as well as provisions of the U.S. Constitution and
    U.S. national law.

    "Genocide" is an international crime codified in an international legal
    instrument, the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
    Crime of Genocide. This was adopted unanimously by the United Nations
    General Assembly in 1948 and subsequently became the supreme law of
    the United States, as stipulated by Article VI of the Constitution
    pursuant to its ratification by the U.S. Senate.

    Article II of the Genocide Convention delineates the crime of
    "genocide" and prescribes the objective/material and subjective/mental
    elements that should be proven to show the existence of the
    crime. To incriminate a person of the crime of "genocide" or for state
    responsibility to arise, it must also be proven that the crime has been
    committed with specific intent, and a competent court must ascertain
    that the crime has been perpetrated. The Convention's Article VI
    specifies that the competent judicial authority is the competent court
    of the state in the territory of which the alleged act was committed,
    or an international penal tribunal, the jurisdiction of which has
    been accepted by the parties. Article IX of the Convention provides
    that the states can take disputes on matters relating to "genocide"
    that arise between them to the International Court of Justice.

    Mr. President, consequently, unless the existence of the material and
    mental elements of the crime, as well as its execution with specific
    intent, have been proven, and unless the perpetration of the crime
    has been determined by a competent court, a charge of "genocide"
    leveled against a person or a state has no legal value and only
    constitutes a defamation.

    Until today, no accused has ever been incriminated in the crime
    of "genocide" or a "crime against humanity," a crime as odious as
    "genocide," without a decision by a competent international criminal
    court. Indeed, the Nuremberg International Military Tribunal, after
    a long trial process, found guilty the leaders of the German Nazis
    accused of "crimes against humanity" and sentenced 22 of them to
    death. Furthermore, those incriminated of "genocide" for the events
    that occurred during the Rwanda and Yugoslavia conflicts have been
    tried and convicted by the Rwanda and Yugoslavia international penal
    tribunals.

    As is known, both tribunals are ad-hoc courts that had been set up
    by decisions of the U.N. Security Council. Saddam Hussein, who was
    charged with crimes against humanity, was tried and convicted in an
    Iraqi Special Court established in line with the principle of due
    process of law. Recently, the legal action brought by Bosnia and
    Herzegovina against Serbia was heard by the International Court of
    Justice. In its decision in February 2007, the court reaffirmed that
    genocide was committed at Srebrenica, but has not convicted the state
    of Serbia of having committed genocide.

    Mr. President, I am certain that you hold dear the concept of the
    presumption of innocence, whose roots go back to the Magna Carta.

    Article 11 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which was
    unanimously adopted in 1948 by the United Nations General Assembly,
    describes the principle of the presumption of innocence as follows:

    "(1) Everyone charged with a penal offense has the right to be presumed
    innocent until proven guilty according to law in a public trial at
    which he has had all the guarantees necessary for his defense.

    "(2) No one shall be held guilty of any penal offence on account of
    any act or omission which did not constitute a penal offense, under
    national or international law, at the time when it was committed. Nor
    shall a heavier penalty be imposed than the one that was applicable
    at the time the penal offense was committed."

    This principle is set forth in the European Human Rights Convention,
    Article 6, paragraph 2:

    "Everyone charged with a criminal offense shall be presumed innocent
    until proven guilty according to law."

    The principle of presumption of innocence is also guaranteed by the
    Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which prescribes that "No
    person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous
    crime" unless tried fairly and indicted by a court.

    Therefore, Mr. President, wouldn't it be a gross injustice and a
    grave violation of the principle of the presumption of innocence to
    heap accusations on Turkey for disputed events of the past?

    Mr. President, as you would agree, the principle of legality, which
    is as old as the concept of law itself, is a basic concept in both
    international and national justice. According to this principle,
    an act is not recognized as a crime unless it was legally defined
    before the act was committed. "Genocide," as a word, as a concept and
    as a codified international crime, did not exist in 1915. After being
    defined for the first time by the U.N. General Assembly document 96
    (I) on Dec. 11, 1946, it was codified by the U.N. Genocide Convention
    on Dec. 9, 1948.

    Consequently Mr. President, by leveling accusations of the crime of
    "genocide" (directly during your campaign speeches and indirectly in
    your 2009 remembrance day statement), haven't you contravened the two
    dimensions of this principle expressed by the maxims "nullum crimen
    sine lege" and "nulla poena sine lege" - there is no crime without
    a law, and no punishment without a law?

    Mr. President, the judgments made in your statement appear to us
    to violate the spirit of the U.S. Constitution, which espouses the
    principle of legality in its Article I, Section 9 by forbidding the
    passage of ex-post-facto criminal laws and bans retrospective criminal
    sanction. We also must note that President Thomas Jefferson, in his
    Aug. 13, 1821, letter to Isaac McPherson, asserted that "ex-post-facto
    laws are against natural right." This shows that an abhorrence of
    retroactive application of laws in criminal justice has a deep-rooted
    legal history in the United States.

    Moreover, the principle of legality is equally prescribed by Article 28
    of the 1969 Vienna Convention of the Law of Treaties under the heading,
    "Non-Retroactivity of the Treaties."

    Mr. President, in light of the foregoing irrefutable points, certain
    concerns and questions inescapably arise.

    What are we to infer from the statement you might make this year
    regarding the disputed events of 1915, if this statement includes
    the word "genocide," or, echoing your 2009 statement, employs the
    word's exact Armenian translation, "metz yeghern" (Meds Yeghern),
    and alleges the massacre of the 1.5 million Armenians?

    Wouldn't such a statement flagrantly violate and flout universal
    principles of law, international law and the U.S. Constitution? And
    to what possible worthy end?

    Wouldn't it constitute, for the Turkish people and their forebears,
    a judgment without trial?

    Wouldn't the Turkish people consider this gross injustice inflicted
    on them the outcome of narrow domestic political calculus, heedless
    of basic fairness and shared U.S.-Turkish interests?

    Wouldn't the imputation of historical guilt upon the people of Turkey
    and upon their forebears, who themselves suffered enormous losses
    and were exposed to unbearable pains during those tragic times, be at
    utter odds with your stated proposal before our Parliament to build
    a model partnership between the United States and Turkey?

    Mr. President, historian Arthur Ponsonby penetratingly discusses
    the terrible and enduring effects of war propaganda that persist for
    generations in his "Falsehood in Wartime":

    "The injection of the poison of hatred into men's minds by means of
    falsehood is a greater evil in wartime than the actual loss of life.

    The defilement of the human soul is worse than the destruction of
    the human body."

    I think that Ponsonby's cogent words are valid now and will remain
    valid in the future. What we need today, more than ever, is an
    international environment that we can hand over to our children
    and future generations - a world where peace, security, tolerance,
    friendship and goodwill reign, instead of prejudices, hatred and
    passions for revenge.

    For this reason, Mr. President, I must urge you to avoid being
    influenced by superficial stereotypes regarding the events of 1915
    that are rooted in large part in the deliberate wartime propaganda
    efforts of the World War I Allies. I ask that you foster impartiality
    and avoid contributing to a deepening of the wounds suffered by the
    Turkish and Armenian nations in this enormous human tragedy.

    In this context, the best course for the U.S. should be, in line
    with an ethical and evenhanded approach, to encourage the parties
    to bring to light and to clarify the obscure and ambiguous aspects
    of the conflict between the Ottoman state and the Armenians. This
    would best be accomplished by employing a common, scientifically
    disciplined research effort by Turks and Armenians regarding their
    mutual history and by completely opening their archives to examination.

    I am submitting these views for your consideration, trusting that
    you will examine them with objectivity and fairness.

    With my deepest respect,

    Dr. Å~^ukru M. Elekdag

    * Å~^ukru Elekdag is a Republican People's Party, or CHP, deputy from
    Istanbul and a former ambassador to the United States
Working...
X