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  • 'Some Perspectives On Genocide'

    "SOME PERSPECTIVES ON GENOCIDE"

    eKurd.net
    Feb 18 2014

    18.2.2014
    By Desmond Fernandes - Peace in Kurdistan Campaign

    Armenian genocide. Photo: AFP/Getty â~@¢ See Related Articles February
    18, 2014

    Presented at the 'Holocaust Commemoration and Genocide Awareness'
    meeting, the House of Commons, Committee Room 16, Westminster, 4th
    February 2014. Organised by the Universal Peace Federation (UPF)
    and hosted by Mr Virendra Sharma, MP.

    Desmond Fernandes, in his presentation, highlighted some of the key
    perspectives of Raphael Lemkin (who coined the neologism genocide),
    Khatchatur Pilikian, Gregory Stanton and John Docker on genocide.

    Pilikian, on the occasion of Hrant Dink Day on 19th January 2010,
    had observed that:

    Our turbulent times ... will soon teach us new lessons, granted we
    are willing to learn and act upon it. As the Preamble of the Verdict
    of the prestigious Permanent Peoples' Tribunal of April 16th 1984
    concludes: 'Indeed, acknowledging genocide itself is a fundamental
    means of struggling against genocide. The acknowledgement is itself
    an affirmation of the right of a people under international law to
    a safeguarded existence'.

    As President of the International Association of Genocide Scholars
    and President of Genocide Watch, Gregory Stanton had noted that:
    "In 1997, The International Association of Genocide Scholars declared
    unanimously that the Turkish massacres of over one million Armenians
    was a crime of genocide ... Denial ... is actually a continuation of
    the genocide, because it is a continuing attempt to destroy the victim
    group psychologically and culturally, to deny its members even the
    memory of the murders of their relatives ... That is what the Turkish
    government today is doing to Armenians around the world ... [In terms
    of evidence, there are] thousands of pages of eye-witness reports
    from Armenian survivors, American consular officers, missionaries,
    and most tellingly, in the archives of the Ottoman Empire's allies,
    Germany and Austria-Hungary, as well as by the records of the Ottoman
    Courts-Martial of 1918-1920". Other sources, Fernandes noted, abound.

    Raphael Lemkin had also explained part of his reasoning behind creating
    the term and concept of genocide: "I understood that the function of
    memory" - in reflecting upon these substantive issues - "is not only
    to register past events, but to stimulate human conscience" to act
    to confront and address these terrible actions, and to be mindful of
    the repercussions they have on individuals and collectives of people,
    on women, children, relatives of the disappeared, widows, so, so many
    people. For Lemkin, genocide did:

    not necessarily involve mass killing; [genocidal actions] can be
    incremental, involving aspects that are cultural, political, social,
    legal, intellectual, spiritual, economic, biological, physiological,
    religious and moral. Such actions involve issues of health, food
    and nourishment, of family life and care of children and of birth as
    well as death. Such actions involve considerations of the honour and
    dignity of peoples [as opposed to their debasement] and the future
    of humanity as a world community ...

    He points to recurring features in historical genocides: mass
    mutilations; deportations under harsh conditions often involving
    forced marches; attacks on family life, with separation of men and
    women and the taking away of the opportunity for procreation; removal
    and transfer of children; destruction of political leadership; death
    from illness, hunger and disease through overcrowding on reserves
    and in concentration camps (Docker, 2010).

    Lemkin also wished to clarify that political and cultural genocide
    were terms he considered all too relevant. Unfortunately, Cold War
    posturing by both the USSR and the US effectively gutted the Genocide
    Convention of key aspects pertaining to these phenomena. More recently,
    Fernandes reported that there had been a number of initiatives to
    more fully integrate culturally genocidal actions into the framework
    of the Convention, as well as political genocide.

    He stressed the importance of holding genocidal perpetrators to
    account in a court of law, following due process, but noted, in the
    full text of his presentation,[ii] the questionable manner in which
    the International Criminal Court (ICC) functioned to secure 'justice'
    (whether relating to genocidal or other crimes). In the full text of
    his presentation, he made reference to Edward Herman's 2013 findings
    regarding "features of the ICC that reveal its structured bias. For
    one thing, its charter does not make aggression a punishable crime, in
    this regard following the plan of the ICTY [the Yugoslavia tribunal].

    This is convenient for the United States and its principal allies as
    they engage in aggression often, so it is excluded although it is the
    most basic and important criminal act and is a fundamental element of
    the UN Charter. Furthermore, the ICC's reach is limited to states that
    sign on to it, or when the Security Council requests that it act. The
    United States signed the original Rome statute in December 2000, but
    it has never ratified that statute, so while denying ICC jurisdiction
    over its own acts, it feels free to bring cases for the ICC to enforce
    against others. Given its power in the Security Council, Darfur and
    selected other African states can be subjected to an ICC indictment,
    but not the United States, Israel, or Kagame's Rwanda".

    In his presentation, Fernandes also felt that John Docker's (2010)
    reflections on the nature and concept of genocide were relevant:

    The definition of genocide ... always has a double character: both
    discursive and legal. In my view, we should not base the historical
    study of genocide [sorely] on a legal definition alone [important
    as that is]; indeed, we should not base the historical study of any
    phenomena on a legal definition alone.

    Desmond Fernandes dedicated his presentation to all the people
    struggling against, and being subjected to, genocide worldwide and
    also dedicated it to the late Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink. Hrant
    was assassinated in Turkey just over 7 years ago, significantly for
    raising the issue of the Armenian genocide and its wider repercussions
    on society in Turkey. Fernandes drew attention to Hrant Dink's wife's
    recent pronouncement about the failure of the political and judicial
    system in Turkey to investigate his murder or to hold those responsible
    to account:

    "As the Dink Family, we will no longer be a tool in the game of state
    structures that insults us ... Since the slaying of Hrant Dink on
    January 19, 2007, the system in Turkey - with its judiciary, security
    forces, military and civilian bureaucracy, and political institutions
    - has all but mocked us. While pretending to pursue justice, the
    criminal alliance called the state re-committed the murder day by
    day, hearing by hearing, over and over again. This alliance is the
    very crime syndicate that planned the murder and then covered it up
    ... No effective investigation was conducted at any stage of this
    case. The biggest insult, however, came from the court when it ruled
    that no organisation was involved in the murder ... In this case,
    political will was the only thing necessary to uncover the state's
    murder mechanisms and the criminal alliance. [But] despite all its
    public statements and pledges, the government persistently [has]
    refrained from displaying political will.

    The Friends of Hrant Dink organization, Fernandes emphasised,
    "claims that almost all of the civil servants who were involved
    in the death of the journalist were promoted by the government"
    (Hurriyet Daily News, 18th January 2014).

    Apart from being actively engaged in genocide denialism (not only
    relating to the genocide of Armenians, but 'Others', including
    Assyrians, Arameans, Greeks and Kurds), Fernandes argued that the
    Turkish government, like so many governments across the world,
    from the US to the Sri Lankan, Indian, Pakistan and our own British
    government, continues to not only be complicit in, but also directly
    responsible for perpetrating the crime of genocide. Bodies such as
    the United Nations and the European Union, Fernandes added, are also
    responsible for facilitating genocide. The United States and her
    'allies' have made a mockery of the UN 'Responsibility to Protect'
    initiative. As Chomsky has concluded over the US position in this
    hardly inconsequential matter: "If it weren't so tragic, it would
    be farcical".

    The US government and its 'allies' (including the Turkish government)
    have continued to support extremist forces that are creating
    havoc - often even genocidal havoc - in the Near and Middle East,
    Asia, Africa, the Americas and elsewhere. In the full text of his
    presentation, he noted the manner in which the co-president of the
    Kurdistan Communities' Union (KCK) Executive Council criticised the
    Turkish state's ongoing support for al-Qaeda affiliated groups that
    were attacking Kurdswww.Ekurd.net as well as "Others" in Rojava [the
    autonomous region in Syria]: "We didn't start the peace process [in
    Turkey] so that Turkey could move the war to Rojava by supporting the
    al-Nusra Front, the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, and al-Qaeda
    affiliated groups ... It's the cause of much instability and conflict.

    If you want stability and non-conflict, then you need to solve this
    problem".

    The US government's record in directly perpetrating or being complicit
    in the crime of genocide in many regions of the world - even at the
    present time, as much as in the recent past - was deeply unsettling,
    and needed to be recognised and confronted, Fernandes argued. In the
    full text of his presentation, he cited Rick Rozoff (2010):

    The US has rightly been accused of practicing double standards in
    relation to genocide charges, condemning mass killings (alleged as well
    as real) in nations whose governments are not viewed favourably by
    Washington and its allies while ignoring, minimizing and justifying
    it when perpetrated by an approved government. But it is not, as
    defenders of American foreign policy often state, a question of not
    being able to respond to every crisis or of responding to the most
    egregious situation first ...

    As [Edward Herman and David Peterson] explain: "When we ourselves
    commit mass-atrocity crimes, the atrocities are Constructive, our
    victims are unworthy of our attention and indignation, and never suffer
    'genocide' at our hands - like the Iraqi Untermenschen who have died
    in such grotesque numbers over the past two decades. But when the
    perpetrator of mass-atrocity crimes is our enemy or a state targeted
    by us for destabilization and attack, the converse is true. Then
    the atrocities are Nefarious and their victims worthy of our focus,
    sympathy, public displays of solidarity, and calls for inquiry and
    punishment ...

    To reiterate their point: When the killing, maiming, poisoning and
    displacement of millions of civilians are perpetrated by the US
    directly and in collusion with a client regime it assists, arms and
    advises - Indochina in the 1960â~@²s and early 1970â~@²s, Central
    America in the 1980â~@²s, the deaths of as many as a million Iraqis
    resulting from sanctions and the deliberate and systematic destruction
    of civilian infrastructure in the 1990â~@²s - that form of indisputable
    genocide is never referred to as such and, instead, presented by the
    government-media-obedient academia triad as not abhorrent and criminal,
    but as legitimate actions in pursuit of praiseworthy policies ...

    Similar systematic and large-scale atrocities carried out by US
    clients armed by Washington - Indonesia against its own people from
    1965-1966 and in East Timor from 1975-1999, Israel in the Palestinian
    Gaza Strip and West Bank from 1967 to the present day, Rwanda and
    Uganda in Congo (where over five and a half million people have
    perished over the last twelve years), Croatia and its Operation Storm
    onslaught in 1995 which caused the worst permanent ethnic cleansing
    in Europe since World War II and its immediate aftermath - are not
    condemned and not even deemed regrettable, but in fact are viewed by
    the US political establishment as Benign.

    Fernandes, in the full text of his presentation, further noted that
    Abdullah Ocalan, reflecting upon the manner in which Kurds had suffered
    over the years, had arrived at the conclusion, from his prison cell
    at Imrali, that: "For 60 years the USA's politics have been dependent
    on the cultural genocide policy against Kurds. To gain the support of
    Turkey and Israel in the region, the Middle East and Caucasus, the USA
    has supported the policy of cultural genocide that has been implemented
    against the Kurds". Edward Herman and David Peterson, in analysing
    "the differential approach of the US in the contexts of both space
    and time", had equally significantly documented the manner in which
    "the suppression of the Kurdish movement has been treated in relation
    to Iraq as opposed to Turkey, and in Iraq from one decade to the next,
    depending on whether the same head of state (Saddam Hussein) was a US
    ally or adversary at the time.Not a matter of what is right or wrong,
    not even of who does what to whom, but solely one of what advances
    America's narrow and cynical geopolitical agenda" (Rozoff, 2010).

    Huge, sophisticated genocide denialism industries and structures,
    Fernandes emphasised, are in place. 'Developmental' genocides are
    also taking place across the world (he cited India and Balochistan as
    examples at the meeting). Corporations work with governments and/or
    'private military companies' (PMC's) and terror groups to exploit
    resources, irrespective of the human and environmental costs involved.

    In the full text of his prepared speech, he also made reference to
    the eastern Congo and to John Pilger's (2013) observation that the
    eastern Congo possesses "a treasure trove of strategic minerals,
    controlled by an atrocious rebel group known as the M23, which in
    turn is run by Uganda and Rwanda, the proxies of Washington".

    Genocide here, Fernandes noted, is not being halted by the the US
    and its 'allies', nor is the International Criminal Court (ICC)
    acting as it should to hold those responsible to account. Why? As
    Edward Herman (2013) reveals: The ICC has a "record as an annex of
    white imperial power ... In Africa itself, the work of the ICC is
    extremely selective, with its choices frequently traceable to great
    power interests and influence. The most massive killings there have
    taken place in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), but as
    the major outside invaders and killers in the DRC, Rwanda and Uganda,
    are clients of the United States and its allies, the leaders of those
    states have been entirely exempt from any threat of ICC prosecution".

    In his presentation, Fernandes drew attention to the ongoing genocide
    of Tamils in Sri Lanka and the recent 22nd January 2014 judgement
    by the Permanent Peoples' Tribunal on Sri Lanka (Bremen Session):
    "The Tribunal finds that genocide against the Eelam Tamil group
    is a continuing process ... The Tribunal believes that the UK,
    the USA and India are guilty of complicity in genocide. Further, the
    Tribunal judges that the UK and the USA are clearly accomplices in the
    genocidal process ... The United Nations ... had a decisive role in
    the failure to prevent as well as in the enactment of the genocidal
    process against the Eelam Tamils ... The European Union [also] ...

    contributed to the implementation of the genocidal process".

    He also drew attention to what is happening in Balochistan. A 3000 km
    Voice for Baloch Missing Persons (VBMP) long march from Quetta to the
    UN offices in Islamabad is taking place, involving relatives of the
    disappeared. This march, unreported largely in the British mainstream
    press, is seeking justice and accountability for the genocide being
    perpetrated there. He quoted Qadeer Baloch:

    "We are marching against human rights violations in Balochistan
    which include on-going military operations, enforced-disappearances,
    torture and the kill and dump policy of the Pakistani state in
    Balochistan. We do not expect justice from Pakistan because it
    continues its brutalities in Balochistan. People are still being
    abducted and killed. We are pinning our hopes to the international
    community, international media and human rights organisations to
    raise their voice against state atrocities against Baloch people".

    In the full text of his presentation, he had also documented the
    fact that, just 2 days earlier, in Quetta, the Baloch Gohar (Sisters)
    Movement and the World Baloch Women's Forum had organised a protest
    demonstration over the latest discovery of mass graves in Balochistan
    (On 25th January 2014, a shepherd discovered 3 mass graves and locals
    were able to find 103 missing bodies there). They held placards outside
    the Press Club, with messages such as "UN stop the Baloch genocide,
    Play your role for the safe release of our loved ones" and "Baloch
    Mass Graves is equal to Genocide".

    Even as the Pakistan government continued with its genocidal
    'Kill and Dump' policy in Balochistan, what was equally clear,
    Fernandes noted, was that the genocide of the Hazaras, Ahmadis and
    "Others" also continues in Pakistan. The Chinese government, he
    also recognised in the full text of his prepared speech, was also
    complicit in the genocide of the Baloch. In a 2013 study of the
    situation in Balochistan, Faiz Baluch had concluded that: "Selig
    Harrison describes what goes on in Balochistan as a 'slow motion
    genocide' of Baloch people but, presently, the genocide is in full
    swing by Pakistan and Iran".

    Hrybyair Marri, he noted in the full text of his presentation, had
    clearly exposed the manner in which, "in Balochistan, the Pakistani
    security forces are using the jihadist groups as proxy death squads to
    kidnap and kill Baloch political activists. These death squads have
    the full backing of federal and provincial governments". Meanwhile,
    asylum seekers fleeing genocides such as these, Fernandes reported,
    continue to face innumerable obstacles from British and other
    governmental authorities when they seek sanctuary.

    The US government and its 'allies' (including the Turkish government),
    despite formal claims to the contrary, Fernandes argued, have covertly
    aided, abetted and facilitated many of the crimes and massacres by
    proxy forces in Syria. In the full text of his presentation, Fernandes
    made reference to Ajamu Baraka's (2014) conclusion that "US strategists
    care little about the fact that, in their quest to oust the Syrian
    President, they have created an unholy alliance between the US and its
    Wahhabi allies from Saudi Arabia and al-Qaeda as their 'boots on the
    ground'". To Taner Akcam, "Syrian Christians listening to Mr. Erdogan
    [the Prime Minister of Turkey] and his denialist rhetoric are reminded
    of 1915, and that makes Turkey look very much like a security threat
    to them".

    Salih Muslim, the co-chair of the Democratic Union Party (PYD) in
    Rojava (Syria), in September 2013, asserted that what the Turkish
    "government is doing is no secret. They are still sending Syrian gangs
    against us. Look, east of Serekaniye, they removed barbed wires and
    cleared paths through minefields for these gangs to move easily ...

    Roads are opened for the Ahrar al-Sham brigade, Jabat al-Nusra
    and al-Qaeda to fight us ... Turkey is using these gangs to fight
    us. They give them artillery and ammunition. We have documented all
    this. They do it in broad daylight. Turkey is helping these gangs who
    chop off the heads of people, eat the hearts of their opposition and
    rape our women. The world is watching silently ... Their objective
    is obvious. To weaken and eliminate the Kurds ... They are giving
    guns to gangs ... When we visited Turkey, we provided them with a
    file on the dirty war these gangs were staging through Turkey. We
    exposed those who were helping these gangs in Turkey under the guise
    of humanitarian agencies or civil society organizations".

    In Turkey, meanwhile, Fernandes reported that the Kurdish Peace and
    Democracy Party (BDP) Vice Co-President - alongside other political
    and cultural, human rights analysts, politicians and organisations
    (including the Kurdistan National Congress/KNK, the Alliance for
    Kurdish Rights, the Kurdish Women's Office for Peace/CENÃ~N and the
    Democratic Society Congress/DTK Co-Chair Ahmet Turk) - has referred
    to "political genocide operations" being undertaken against the party
    and Kurdish communities. Thousands of civilians (including academics,
    lawyers, publishers, journalists, teachers, students, members and key
    politicians of the BDP) have been unjustly targeted and imprisoned in
    so called 'anti-KCK (Kurdistan Communities Union) operations'. This
    is even as 'Other' perceived leftist groups (such as the DHKP-C)
    and civil organisations have been subjected to state-linked terror
    operations. Political prisoners continue to be subjected to isolation,
    torture, ill-treatment, trumped-up charges and show trials. Lawyers
    defending political prisoners have found themselves being detained
    and subjected to criminalisation.

    As the European Association of Lawyers for Democracy and World Human
    Rights (ELDH) Silivri Trial Observation Report of September 2013
    confirmed (as noted in the full text of Fernandes' speech): "Today,
    Turkey's prisons hold around 10,000 political prisoners, who include
    politicians, mayors, academics, journalists, trade unionists, human
    rights activists. These detentions and these patently unfair political
    trials not only discredit the AKP government internationally and
    regionally, but also render questionable its real intentions regarding
    the current peace negotiations ... Lawyers throughout Turkey, Turkish
    as well as Kurdish, now feel intimidated by these trials where there
    is no presumption of innocence, and where lawyers can be identified
    with the alleged crimes of their client".

    A recent UK lawyers trial observation delegation had reported at a
    'Hostages of the Peace Process' meeting in London in October 2013 that:
    "Kurdish lawyers have been made to face a justice system which is
    'quite incapable of delivering justice according to international
    standards', said human rights barrister Margaret Owen ... In another
    trial, over 200 politicians and elected officials of the pro-Kurdish
    party, the BDP, are being tried together in a lengthy and arduous
    case that has been going on for over two years. Trade unionists,
    journalists, students, human rights defenders and members of Kurdish
    civil society have been arrested and tried in their hundreds. All of
    this has resulted in Turkey having a third of the world's prisoners
    classified as 'terrorist'".

    Displaying no meaningful commitment to a peace process, and in
    light of human rights violations documented on the ground, Fernandes
    reported that the Co-Presidency of the KCK Executive Council had,
    hardly surprisingly to many, concluded that "the colonialist mind-set
    for cultural genocide still continues" in Turkey. For the Kurdish
    political movements and communities in Rojava and Turkey that are
    actively confronting forces that target 'Others', the US governmental
    objective remains to cynically not recognise, and to derail/frustrate
    and criminalise wherever possible, any democratic autonomy initiatives
    and 'realities' that clash with its own geopolitical agendas.

    Consequently, as the investigative journalist Cengiz Candar has
    revealed (as noted in Fernandes' prepared text), he was "rebuked by a
    very high-level State Department official when I asked why the United
    States withheld a visa from the Syrian Kurdish leader Salih Muslim,
    who was to participate at a [November 2013] panel in Washington titled
    'The Kurdish Role in the New Middle East' ... Obviously the US",
    Candar concluded, "was careful to appease Turkey. It wasn't all that
    hard to detect this from my dialogue with the senior State Department
    official".

    In many, many other areas of the world, too, Fernandes noted that
    public mobilisation and opposition against repressive and often
    also genocidal policies is often termed 'terrorist opposition' by
    governments in power (particularly post-9/11). 'Terrorism lists' and
    proscription regimes have been questionably drawn up by national and
    supra-national bodies. Political movements, diasporic communities and
    individuals resisting repression and genocide have been criminalised
    through these 'lists' and regimes. In such criminalised contexts are
    many public struggles against genocide and oppression taking place.

    Desmond ended his presentation by emphasising the need to reflect upon
    these matters and act upon these concerns and engage in solidarity
    with targeted 'Others', wherever they may be.

    [i] Desmond Fernandes is a member of the Peace in Kurdistan Campaign
    and a former Senior Lecturer in Human Geography and 'The Geography
    of Genocide' at De Montfort University, UK. He is the author of
    The Kurdish and Armenian Genocides: from Censorship and Denial to
    Recognition? (Apec, 2007; Peri, 2013), co-author of The Targeting of
    'Minority Others' in Pakistan (BPCA, 2013) and has written numerous
    articles on genocide and the targeting of the 'Other'. His works have
    been translated into a number of languages including English, French,
    German, Dutch, Greek, Turkish and Kurdish.

    [ii] Not all of which could be presented before the audience due to a
    sudden but understandable decision by the organisers to cut short the
    meeting by 30 minutes, to allow attendees to travel back home before
    a London underground strike took effect. This meant that speakers
    had to shorten their oral presentations accordingly.


    From: Baghdasarian
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