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  • How should Turkey face genocide charges?

    KurdishMedia, UK
    June 23 2005

    How should Turkey face genocide charges?

    23/06/2005 Bianet.org - By Tolga Korkut

    Academics urge the government prepare "facing the past" vis-a-vis
    "Armenian Genocide" charges in the Ottoman Empire. Macar advises the
    state give up denial, while Caglar points to the fact that Turkey
    needs to consider international community.

    BIA (Istanbul) - As Turkish leaders angrily rebuff the recent German
    Parliament decision calling Turkey recognize `Armenian Genocide' in
    1915, political scientists Prof. Baskin Oran of the Ankara University
    and Associate Prof. Elcin Macar of the Yildiz Technical University,
    are of the opinion that German parliament's is a political call,
    which bears no legal obligation for the Turkish Republic.

    According to Turkish academics the main question here is: What does
    it mean for the Turkish Republic to take historic responsibility for
    the 1915 Armenian expulsion.

    However Prof Bakir Caglar of Istanbul University is of the opinion
    that `recognition of genocide' would bring in its wake certain `legal
    responsibilities' for Turkey.

    Facing the past

    Recalling refusals and threats by the government directed at
    academics who urge for an open discussion of the issue, Turkey has to
    stop preventing public discussions on the Armenian problem, Macar,
    told bianet.

    "The state has to give up claiming that such a thing never happened,
    embracing this as the official argument, and being a side in the
    discussion,' said Macar. `If you are for leaving the issue to
    historians, then you should really leave it to historians. You can't
    prevent discussions.'

    `Saying that `we have opened the archives' means `let us look into
    the truth because we don't know the truth.' But the Turkish state is
    continuing to act as if it knows the truth,' said Macar.

    The German parliament has made the following calls on the German
    government:

    * The German government should help the Turkish Grand National
    Assembly, the
    Turkish government and the Turkish society to face its past,

    * It should help set up a commission of Turkish and Armenian
    historians,

    * It should have the archives, which were sent from Germany to
    Turkey,
    opened to public,

    * It should demand that the canceled Armenian conference takes place,


    * It should contribute to the normalization of relations between
    Turkey and
    Armenia.

    Oran: How can members of the `deep state' in 1915 be defended?

    Baskin Oran of Ankara University argues that the `individuals, not
    institutions or states, are responsible for the genocide.'

    Oran underlined the fact that the Turkish Republic is the state which
    demolished the Ottoman Empire: `The Turkish Republic has not taken
    upon itself anything of the Ottoman Empire, except for the `Duyun-u
    Umumiye, the public debt owed by the Empire to individuals. And it
    was normal for the Republic to take that debt upon itself. For,
    otherwise it would have remained outside the international system.'

    `I don't understand why the Republic of Turkey, who has crushed the
    Ottoman Empire, is now coming into the defense of the `Teskilati
    Mahsusa' (Special Forces) henchmen of the `deep state' of 1915, and
    the deep state itself,' said Oran. `The Republic of Turkey has no
    legal responsibility.'

    Apologizing

    According to Elcin Macar, Turks may apologize for the deportation of
    Armenians in 1915 and express that this was a mistake of their
    ancestors.

    `If Turkey apologizes, it would be in the form of: `We apologize for
    what our ancestors have done,'' said Macar.

    According to Oran however, the state must first apologize to the
    Turkish public.

    `If the Republic of Turkey is going to apologize, it should first
    apologize to the Turkish public,' said Oran. `For having masked the
    issue for all these decades, for not discussing it, and for banning
    the discussions.'

    International law issues

    According to Prof. Bakir Caglar of the Political Sciences Department
    of Istanbul University, settling accounts with the past isn't
    something that can be done on one's own. `This can only be possible
    through means and groundwork of international law,' said Caglar.

    Caglar said in the face of increasing number of parliament decisions
    across Europe the issue gains three dimensions in terms of
    international law:

    * The recognition of the genocide becoming a legal responsibility.

    * The issue of insurance: The international companies that assumed
    the insurances of Armenian property are still operational. The legal
    procedure on the issue is continuing in the United States.

    *Property in land: It is certain that real estate belonging to
    Armenians were seized. This is a legal problem for Turkey. (TK)

    BIA News Centre
    21/06/2005
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