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  • Scholar's arrest fuels diplomatic dispute

    Chicago Tribune, IL
    June 22 2005

    Scholar's arrest fuels diplomatic dispute
    Turkish man is held on Armenian charges

    By Catherine Collins
    Special to the Tribune
    Published June 22, 2005


    ISTANBUL -- The arrest of a Duke University doctoral student last
    week on charges of trying to smuggle rare books out of Armenia has
    stirred concerns among academics and officials and illustrates the
    quagmire of Turkish-Armenian relations.

    The student, Yektan Turkyilmaz, was the first Turkish citizen ever
    given access to the Armenian national archives. He had just concluded
    his fourth research trip there Friday when he was arrested before
    boarding a plane at the airport in Yerevan, the Armenian capital.

    Armen Yeganian of the Armenian Embassy in Washington described the
    case as a customs violation and said Turkyilmaz had several books
    dating back as far as the 17th Century. But Turkyilmaz's family and
    academic associates said a researcher of his caliber never would try
    to steal priceless books.

    Because Turkey and Armenia do not have diplomatic relations,
    Turkyilmaz initially landed in a diplomatic no-man's land. University
    officials and the U.S. and Turkish governments have taken up his
    cause, and Turkey on Tuesday officially requested Turkyilmaz's
    release.

    "I believe this case is fundamentally about academic freedom," said
    his academic adviser, Orin Starn, a cultural anthropology professor
    at Duke University.

    Starn described Turkyilmaz, 33, as "a brilliant and widely respected
    young scholar" who has received numerous fellowships to support his
    research into nationalism among Turks, Armenians and Kurds in the
    dying days of the Ottoman Empire.

    His family has not been able to contact Turkyilmaz, though they have
    spoken with his friends in Armenia, some of whom were detained and
    interrogated, said his sister, Zeynep.

    Turkyilmaz's case is the latest episode in a long-running diplomatic
    dispute about what happened to hundreds of thousands of Armenians in
    Turkey between 1915 and 1922.

    Armenians say that Turkey's mass deportation of Armenians during
    World War I was part of an organized genocide that killed 1.5 million
    people. Turkey denies there was any systematic attempt to kill
    Armenians.

    The Turkish State Archive recently issued a list of more than 523,000
    Turks it says were killed by Armenians the same years.

    Regardless, it is a dark chapter in Turkish history that until
    recently has been discussed rarely and left out of Turkish textbooks
    while landing many scholars, journalists and activists in jail.

    Turkey's best-known novelist, Orhan Pamuk, shattered a taboo earlier
    this year when he said that 1 million Armenians were murdered in his
    country. Days of screaming headlines, death threats and several
    lawsuits charging him with insulting the Turkish state followed his
    statement.

    Turkey has for years engaged in diplomatic scuffles with any country
    it suspects of taking the Armenian side. This spring, the Turkish
    parliament demanded apologies from the legislatures of the 12
    countries that have recognized Armenian claims of genocide.

    Gradually, however, partly as a result of efforts to join the
    European Union, a door on the past has been opened.

    Although Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul insists that the
    genocide label is "pure slander," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    has called on all countries to open archives to scholars to determine
    once and for all what has happened.

    A spokesman at the Turkish Foreign Ministry said he is baffled by the
    arrest.

    "This is a very strange situation," the official said, speaking on
    condition of anonymity. "From what we know of Turkyilmaz's research,
    it seems he was more sympathetic to the Armenian view than the
    Turkish."
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