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Analysis: 'Genocide' Term Still Not Used

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  • Analysis: 'Genocide' Term Still Not Used

    ANALYSIS: 'GENOCIDE' TERM STILL NOT USED

    The New Age, South Africa
    May 6 2014

    Tom Wheeler

    A South Africa's ambassador to Turkey in the late '90s and early 2000s,
    I was amazed to learn of the statement issued by Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan on April 23, the 99th anniversary of the events
    commonly known as the Armenian genocide. It was a forbidden topic
    during my tenure.

    The fact that there was no mention in South African media is probably
    attributable to the absence of an identifiable Armenian diaspora here.

    Erdogan conveyed his condolences to the descendants of those
    Armenians who lost their lives in 1915. The statement, issued in
    Turkish, Armenian and seven other languages, elicited widely different
    reactions in Turkey and abroad. The Armenian Patriarch Archbishop Aram
    Atesyan, based in Istanbul, met with Erdogan. At the other extreme,
    the president of Armenia dismissed the statement because Erdogan had
    avoided referring to the events as "genocide".

    Some commentators have noted that the statement was probably a
    foreign policy ploy drafted in the foreign ministry, rather than
    in Erdogan's prime ministry. It was seen to be aimed at influencing
    relations between Turkey and the US, rather than with Armenia. As it
    is, US President Barack Obama in his annual statement on the topic
    failed again to use the word "genocide," indicating perhaps that
    sound relations with Turkey are more important than the votes of the
    Armenian diaspora in the US.

    The term genocide is simply not used in Turkey, even though the events
    took place several years before the declaration of the Turkish republic
    in 1923. Orders for the expulsion of Armenians from Anatolia came
    from the Young Turks who ruled the Ottoman Empire during the First
    World War.

    In 2008 the Armenian diaspora commissioned a British queen's counsel,
    Geoffrey Robinson, to study the records to establish whether there was
    indeed a case of genocide for Turkey to answer. He did find that by
    current definitions genocide did occur. But interestingly he reveals
    something not commonly known.

    In October 1918, at the end of the First World War, the Young Turks
    lost power and the Ottoman Sultan appointed a military tribunal that
    found many of them guilty of "deportation and massacre". Oddly, the
    Turkish republican government has never used this information in its
    own defence.

    On the other hand, Turkey was one of the first countries to recognise
    the independence of Armenia after the Soviet Union's collapse.

    In 2009, the current president of Turkey, Abdullah Gul, engaged in some
    football diplomacy not unlike the ping-pong diplomacy of the Nixon era
    in the US when Nixon used sport as a way to open contact with China.

    Gul went to the Armenian capital to watch the European Cup of Nations'
    football match between the two countries at the invitation of Armenian
    President Serzh Sargsian, who later attended a return match in Bursa,
    Turkey.

    Regrettably the Swiss-brokered protocol to end the dispute at that
    time came to naught.

    The cause of the deadlock was the unresolved 1993 invasion and
    occupation by Armenia of the Azerbaijan enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Azerbaijan, which also became independent at the demise of the USSR,
    is a Turkic-speaking state with which Turkey has close fraternal
    relations.

    The refusal of Turkey to recognise the events of 1915 as "genocide"
    combined with the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh issue have up to now
    made a solution impossible.

    What then could be the reason for the sudden reconciliatory gesture
    by the Turkish prime minister?

    The centenary of the mass deportation of hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians from Anatolia to Syria and the death of the majority of them,
    whether one terms that genocide or not, will be one year from now,
    on April 24, 2015.

    In his statement, Erdogan, perhaps for the first time ever, made
    a clear distinction between the Ottoman Sultanate responsible for
    the events of 1915 and the current republican government created 94
    years ago.

    While Erdogan has been criticised as opportunistic by some of his own
    countrymen, on both the right and the liberal left, this is the first
    real gesture indicating any shift in the Turkish position that could
    lead to possible reconciliation between the two countries and to the
    "common future" referred to in the statement.

    Armenia certainly needs a solution and an open border with Turkey. It
    is a poverty-stricken country without resources and therefore very
    much in the thrall of Putin's Russia.

    It has already signed up to the Eurasian Union, the means by which
    Moscow wishes to reconstruct the empire of the czars.

    The unresolved problem of Nagorno-Karabakh remains a stumbling
    block but Erdogan's move gives Turkey the political advantage in the
    international perception of his country.

    Then again, Erdogan's harsh response to Turkey's May Day demonstrations
    will probably undo any personal advantage his statement on Armenia
    may have brought.

    Tom Wheeler is an independent commentator and former diplomat

    http://www.thenewage.co.za/blogdetail.aspx?mid=186&blog_id=3029




    From: A. Papazian
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