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  • The Armenian Genocide: What about Turkey?

    Ekklesia, UK
    Jan 1 2012


    The Armenian Genocide: What about Turkey?


    By Harry Hagopian
    31 Dec 2011

    Hold on for a minute: is this still December 2011 (just) or are we
    already in April 2012? Before anyone assumes that I have taken
    complete leave of my senses, I am asking this question merely because
    of a recent hyper-inflation of stories in both the official media and
    blogosphere that are linked to the Armenian genocide of 1915.

    This trend usually occurs nearer the annual anniversary date of 24
    April and not at the end of the year when politicians are far more
    eager to rush back to their constituencies and rest after all the
    rampant mess they have caused over the past year.

    However, December 2011 was somewhat different in that it was
    characterised by two key Armenian events - one in France and another
    in Israel. In France, the National Assembly - the lower house of
    parliament - approved a draft law that would criminalise the denial of
    the Armenian genocide.

    Nonetheless, the Senate - the upper house of parliament - still needs
    to ratify the bill before it can ever become law. In fact, Bernard
    Accoyer, Speaker of the National Assembly, stated that such
    legislation was unlikely to be adopted by both houses of parliament
    before the forthcoming presidential elections.

    The Turkish reaction to the vote was both disproportionate and
    vengeful when hackers crashed the website of the Senate in Paris. The
    site ended up showing a black screen signed by Iskorpit - allegedly
    the trademark of an infamous Turkish hacker who claims to have
    hijacked numerous websites under a Distributed Denial of Service
    (DDoS) attack in which thousands of hijacked computers bombard a
    website with demands for information, swamping it and effectively
    shutting it down. On the same day, the website of Valérie Boyer, the
    parliamentarian from President Sarkozy's ruling UMP party who was the
    primary sponsor of the `genocide draft law' was also hacked and
    started showing a black screen with a Turkish flag.

    Hot on the heels of the vote in the French National Assembly, the
    Commission on Education, Culture and Sport in the Israeli Knesset
    [Parliament] also debated whether Israel should mark April 24 as a
    memorial day for `the massacre of the Armenian people'. Although a
    similar proposal had been rejected by the Knesset in 2007, Zahava
    Gal-On from the left-leaning Meretz party suggested that the colder
    diplomatic climate might mean that the measure could gain support this
    time round whilst the Knesset speaker Reuven Rivlin stressed that the
    issue was not a political one.

    Apart from France and Israel, Milorad Dodik, Head of the Serbian
    Sector of Bosnia from the Serbian Independent Social-Democratic Party,
    also requested the Parliament of Bosnia and Herzegovina to discuss a
    bill prohibiting denial of the Armenian genocide. Nevertheless, there
    is little likelihood for the adoption of such a bill since the Serbian
    Social-Democrats have only 8 out of 42 seats in the Federal Parliament
    of Bosnia.

    Let me posit four key points that I would argue are germane to the
    ongoing discourse over the issue of recognition.

    - The timing of the debates in France and Israel reek of sheer
    political expediency. In France, President Sarkozy is anxiously
    courting the Armenian French votes in order to outdo François
    Hollande's Socialist Party in the presidential elections of April-May
    2012. In Israel, the resurgent enthusiasm toward the Armenian genocide
    is meant more as a potential threat - a red flag if you will - to
    Turkey ever since bilateral relations chilled following the Mavi
    Marmara flotilla incident of June 2010. Given the incontrovertible
    historical authenticity of the genocide, coupled with a strong
    collective anamnesis, should Armenian nationalism and faithfulness to
    their identity accept their `cause' to be crassly marketed with such
    animated toadying in a political bazaar that debases the memory of
    their murdered ancestors? Is it not clear that the Israeli Knesset or
    the French Senate will not deliver the goods? Even the Serbian
    proposal is more a spike against Croats and Bosnians than any real
    solidarity with Armenians.

    - Given the strategy pursued so far by many Armenians, what is the
    long-term objective of those recognitions? Armenian and Turkish
    emotions vacillate every time this issue comes up, but have the 21
    state recognitions to date achieved any discernible or concrete result
    in a geopolitical sense? Is it not perhaps time to think more
    laterally?

    - All the bluster from Turkey's irascible Prime Minister - with his
    comparisons to Algeria or his diplomatic sanctions against France -
    claim a fury with the French for daring to criminalise the denial of
    genocide. However, the blatant irony and dubious double-standards lie
    in the fact that Turkey itself has already criminalised genocide
    recognition in its Penal Code and has wantonly gaoled those who have
    referred to the Armenian experience as genocide.

    - Almost a century after this genocide, should Armenians go down the
    road of muzzling freedom of expression - a fundamental right that the
    whole Middle East and North Africa population is dying for these days?
    Should one encourage legislating thought and thereby accepting the
    limits of freedom of expression? Mind you, given the horrific scale of
    the crime, this sensitive issue becomes laden with profound moral,
    ethical, legal, political and psychological implications. Is it
    perhaps not wiser to rely upon oneself and adopt a pan-Armenian
    strategy that uses a sharper national compass?

    In a nutshell, should recognition not pass directly and unfailingly
    through Turkey rather than meander hither and thither?


    © Harry Hagopian is an international lawyer, ecumenist and EU
    political consultant. He also acts as a Middle East and inter-faith
    advisor to the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England & Wales and as
    Middle East consultant to ACEP (Christians in Politics) in Paris. He
    is an Ekklesia associate and regular contributor
    (http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/HarryHagopian). Formerly an Executive
    Secretary of the Jerusalem Inter-Church Committee and Executive
    Director of the Middle East Council of Churches, he is now an
    international fellow, Sorbonne III University, Paris, consultant to
    the Campaign for Recognition of the Armenian Genocide (UK) and author
    of The Armenian Church in the Holy Land. Dr Hagopian's own website is
    www.epektasis.net

    http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/15961

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