A century ago, on 24 April 1915, Ottoman authorities began
to arrest hundreds of Armenian intellectuals. They were deported and
most were later executed. The day is now commemorated worldwide as the
start of the Armenian genocide, when hundreds of thousands – Armenians
say 1.5 million – were driven into the desert to die or were murdered.
In
Hungary, 16 April, Holocaust Remembrance Day, marks the start of the
ghettoisation of Hungarian Jewry in 1944. Four hundred and thirty
thousand Jews were deported from the ghettos to Auschwitz, where most
were killed on arrival. On 17 April 1975, the Khmer Rouge captured Phnom
Penh, the Cambodian capital, and began their programme of
extermination.
The Bosnian war began on 5 April 1992,
when Bosnian Serbs laid siege to the capital Sarajevo. Two years and a
day later, on 6 April 1994, a plane carrying the presidents of Rwanda
and Burundi was shot down. The Rwandan genocide began that evening. In
three months, Hutu extremists killed 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus.
“Twentieth-century genocides share striking similarities,”
says Khatchig Mouradian, co-ordinator of the Armenian Genocide Programme
at Rutgers University. “The role of ideology, the use of propaganda,
the methods used to annihilate differences and transfer assets to the
dominant group, to name a few.”
In Turkey the past
remains hotly contested. Turkish officials strongly deny that a genocide
took place. The Armenians, they say, were not slaughtered but deported
because they sided with the Russians during the First World War. Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, the president, last year became the first Turkish leader
to offer condolences to the Armenian community. But after Pope Francis
referred to the deaths of the Armenians as “the first genocide of the
20th century”, Turkey recalled its ambassador to the Vatican. A vote by
the European Parliament to refer to the killings as “genocide” provoked
similar fury.
Some argue that the Herero tribe suffered
the first modern genocide. In 1904 some 65,000 Herero, in present-day
Namibia, were slaughtered by German troops. The methodology was
strikingly similar to that used in Armenia: the Herero were driven into
the desert en masse and left to die. Survivors, and the mixed-race
children of Herero rape victims, were studied by German scientists for
their theories of eugenics. “The Nazis adopted the race research and
experimentation that occurred in the Herero genocide,” says Mouradian.
“They looked at the late Ottoman empire’s and early Turkish republic’s
methods of homogenisation and ethnic cleansing with profound admiration,
learning much from it.” A key lesson was the use of irregulars to carry
out atrocities. Professor Taner Akcam, author of A Shameful Act, an
authoritative study of the Armenian genocide, notes how Ottoman
prisoners were released and then specially trained before being
unleashed on Armenian civilians.
During the Holocaust
the brutality of locally recruited auxiliaries in Nazi-occupied states
shocked even the SS. For the Nazis, killing Jews was a military
operation like any other. For their local allies, murder and humiliation
was a pleasure, carried out with relish as they sought to prove their
loyalty to the new racial order.
A similar pattern
emerged in the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s. Prisoners were released to
form paramilitary groups which carried out many of the worst atrocities.
The paramilitaries operated under a separate chain of command,
reporting to the Ministry of Interior. “Hardened criminals were freed.
They had to do some nasty stuff, but they could feel patriotic,” says
Tim Judah, author of The Serbs. “They could expunge their criminal past,
get a free pass for looting and feel they were doing something good for
the nation.”
In Rwanda members of the Interahamwe, a
Hutu paramilitary force, carried out the killings with clubs and
machetes. The Shabiha militia, a former smuggling organisation, has been
blamed for some of Syria’s worst atrocities. It was set up with state
support but operates at arms’ length.
A line of blood runs through
modern history: from the deserts of Namibia and Syria to Auschwitz,
Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and now back to Syria. “The perpetrators,” says
Mouradian, “repeat history precisely because they have learnt from the
past.”Source:
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