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  • Killings From 90 Years Ago Haunt Turkey in its EU Bid

    Wall Street Journal
    May 15 2005

    Killings From 90 Years Ago Haunt Turkey in its EU Bid

    By CARL BIALIK
    May 16, 2005


    The Ottoman empire's deportation and mass killing of Armenians 90
    years ago has become a tense issue for modern-day Turkey, which is
    being pressured by the European Union and some of its member nations
    to acknowledge the actions as genocide and open up its archives. And
    questionable numbers are a central part of the controversy.

    Armenia argues that as many as 1.5 million Armenians were massacred.
    But Turkey says the number of dead was no more than 600,000 and
    possibly far fewer, and says the killings were justified as the
    product of armed conflicts that swept the region at the time.
    Scholars disagree on the number, and politics have obstructed honest
    statistical debate.

    Some background: In the final years of the Ottoman empire -- which
    stretched from modern-day Turkey to much of Europe, northern Africa
    and the Middle East for more than 600 years -- a Turkish nationalist
    government led mass deportations and killings of Armenians. The
    violence lasted from 1915 until the early 1920s. Modern-day Turkey
    says the targeted Armenians, an ethnic minority present throughout
    the empire, had conspired with Russians in military operations
    against the empire, and that Armenians' revolutionary actions against
    the state spurred the mass deportations. Neither Turkey nor Armenia
    existed as nations during the violence, yet many Turks and Armenians
    line up today to defend their ethnic groups' historical records.

    Immigration, trade issues and Turkey's Muslim majority -- which would
    be unique in the EU -- all are playing a large role in the run up to
    negotiations over membership, scheduled to begin in October. Against
    this backdrop, Turkey's historical dispute with Armenia has emerged
    as a potential stumbling block to membership. Heiki Talvitie, the
    EU's special representative to the South Caucasus, said recently at a
    press conference that Turkey's membership chances hinged in part on
    its relations with Armenia, according to Agence France Presse.
    Currently the countries have no diplomatic relations, and a major
    reason is the dispute over whether the Ottomans committed genocide.
    In the past decade, national legislatures of several EU members,
    including France, Italy and the Netherlands, have called the killings
    genocide. The U.S. and Turkey have not.

    Disputed death tolls often follow genocide, according to Richard
    Garfield, a professor of nursing at Columbia University who has
    extensively studied mass killings. "The politicization of mortality
    data means that controversy and wide variations in estimates is the
    norm," Dr. Garfield says. He has worked in Liberia, Yugoslavia and
    Haiti, helping to improve death counts from modern-day conflicts.


    Of course, I can't conclusively determine how many Armenians died.
    But I'll explain how scholars arrived at their estimates and why
    counting the dead is such a complex business.

    Even in a political vacuum, counting the dead from nearly a century
    ago would be difficult. The killers had no reason to tally their
    victims, nor were international organizations in place to monitor the
    killing. So researchers have employed a brute tool: subtraction. They
    compare the number of Armenians before World War I with the number of
    survivors, who were spread across many surrounding countries. The
    difference in population becomes the number of victims. Of course,
    that doesn't account for newborns. It also includes deaths from
    disease and starvation, and while those deaths may be related to the
    killings, it's debatable whether they should be included in the
    overall count. "There really isn't the information to make an
    evidence-based consensus about how many people died," Dr. Garfield
    says.

    As I noted in a previous column, even today in some parts of the
    world population counts are unreliable. All the more so, then, in
    rural areas of the Ottoman empire. Before the killings there were two
    parallel efforts to count the living -- one by the Ottomans, and one
    by the Armenian church -- but there are suggestions both groups'
    motivations may have affected their accuracy (more on that in a
    moment). So researchers trying to arrive at a death count adjust the
    population numbers, and those adjustments can have a big impact on
    end results. For example, count more prewar Armenians, and you'll get
    a higher death toll.


    ABOUT THIS COLUMN
    The Numbers Guy examines numbers and statistics in the news,
    business, politics and health. Some numbers are flat-out wrong,
    misleading or biased. Others are valid and useful, helping us to make
    informed decisions. As the Numbers Guy, I will try to sort through
    which numbers to trust, question or discard altogether. And I'd like
    to hear from you at [email protected]. I'll post and respond to your
    letters. WSJ.com subscribers can sign up to receive e-mail when new
    columns are published (nonsubscribers click here to sign up), and you
    can read more columns at WSJ.com/NumbersGuy.

    Tuluy Tanc, minister counselor of the Turkish embassy in Washington,
    cited death counts to me as low as 8,000 to 9,000, based on records
    Ottomans kept. But those doing the killing are hardly credible
    sources for a death toll. Mr. Tanc said he wouldn't insist on any
    particular set of numbers, saying his government has also recognized
    estimates up to 600,000. "There are many, many different sources," he
    says. The embassy's Web site cites figures between 500,000 and
    600,000.

    Justin McCarthy, a professor at the University of Louisville, arrived
    at a count of 600,000 dead by using official Ottoman population
    registrations. He adjusted for an assumed undercounting of women and
    children, a common problem in unsophisticated population counts, and
    arrived at a prewar population of 1.5 million for Armenians living in
    the eastern part of the Ottoman empire, known as Anatolia. Then he
    counted 900,000 survivors, based on official data from Russia and
    other countries where they settled. Dr. McCarthy published his
    findings in 1983; they were double many earlier estimates.

    In 1991, Levon Marashlian, a professor of history at Glendale
    Community College in Glendale, Calif., published a critique accusing
    Dr. McCarthy of undercounting. Among his arguments: Armenians were
    likely undercounted because they hid from officials during the
    conflict. "If you hide, you're not taxed, you're not conscripted,"
    Dr. Marashlian told me. And he says the Ottomans had their own
    reasons to undercount: "The Ottoman government had the motivation to
    show as few Armenians as possible, because the Europeans were
    pressuring Ottomans to institute reforms." He cites contemporary
    accounts that indicate the Ottomans were suppressing the numbers. Dr.
    Marashlian thus adjusts Dr. McCarthy's prewar estimates higher, and
    notes that the new results are closer to the Armenian church's own
    numbers. He concludes there were two million Armenians before the
    war, and he counts only 800,000 survivors, yielding an estimated
    total of 1.2 million dead.

    Dr. McCarthy, in turn, says the Ottomans' adult male records were
    accurate, and disputes the Armenian church's numbers.

    "The Ottomans in general were good counters," says Columbia's Dr.
    Garfield, but he adds that the Ottomans' population figures -- 1.5
    million for the eastern part of the empire, after Dr. McCarthy's
    adjustments -- are suspect because a harbinger of genocide is the
    undercounting of the targeted group. "It's a step toward their
    nonpersonhood," he says.

    George Aghjayan, an actuary who sits on the eastern region board of
    the Armenian National Committee of America, has also studied Dr.
    McCarthy's numbers in detail. He sent me a lengthy critique by
    e-mail. Among his arguments: Many Armenian men traveled outside the
    empire for work, which would contribute to undercounting of prewar
    adult males; and that Dr. McCarthy's technique for estimating
    Armenian survivors who ended up in Russia could lead to overcounting.
    The bottom line, according to Mr. Aghjayan: By undercounting prewar
    Armenians and overcounting survivors, Dr. McCarthy would undercount
    the dead.

    An estimate of 1.5 million deaths has become the standard number in
    op-ed articles and news accounts of Armenian versions. That's the
    number on the Armenian National Institute's Web site. Rouben Adalian,
    director of the institute, concedes the number is an estimate that
    includes additional Armenian deaths related to the fallout of the
    original killings. He says he is confident that an estimate of more
    than one million "is very secure."

    In the academic ideal, researchers could come together at conferences
    and meetings and work toward a consensus figure. But there is too
    much venom in the air. Armenian advocacy groups and some scientists I
    spoke to labeled Dr. McCarthy a Turkish apologist. He, in turn,
    speaks dismissively of some of his critics. "It's hard to say this is
    scholarly debate," he told me. "It's two sides presenting their
    position and not talking to each other." Meanwhile, Armenian scholars
    charge the Turkish government with limiting access to the Ottoman
    archives to some favored researchers, preventing new information from
    emerging and possibly helping to clarify the debate.

    "I think 100 years from now, our debate about Armenian events will
    not be that different than it is today, because we have limited,
    conflicting information," Dr. Garfield says.

    Some advocates and scholars I contacted for this article said pinning
    down exact numbers isn't necessary. Dennis R. Papazian writes on the
    Web site of the Armenian Research Center at University of
    Michigan-Dearborn, where he serves as director: "Does it really make
    the actions of Turkey better if they succeeded in killing only
    600,000 Armenians and not 1.5 million? ...In any case, it was
    genocide."

    Are death tolls from today's conflicts bound to be disputed a century
    hence? It's a question worth asking in light of the continued
    Armenian controversy. Les Roberts, a research associate at Johns
    Hopkins University who has worked on counting the dead in Congo,
    Rwanda and Sierra Leone, painted a dismaying picture of current
    efforts. In an e-mail from Afghanistan, he mentioned two key
    challenges. First, "No one can agree on how to define the death toll
    from a conflict, just the deaths from intentional violence or all
    those that died because the violence occurred." (The Armenian numbers
    include both.) And, secondly, "No one is charged or expected to count
    the deaths from conflict. The [International Committee of the Red
    Cross] avoids the topic so that they can work with all sides. The
    press is bad at it. The public health crowd is very adverse to being
    killed so they rarely estimate deaths until conflicts are over."

    But Columbia's Dr. Garfield was more hopeful, saying that methods
    have improved markedly; researchers, for instance, survey refugees in
    camps during ongoing conflicts about mortality among friends and
    neighbors. "I am optimistic about our ability to provide people with
    a better base," Dr. Garfield says. "It makes it harder to lie."

    http://online.wsj.com/public/article/0,,SB111591282698931833,00.html?mod=todays_free_fe ature
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