Armenian Women, Who Were Entertaining Restaurant Patrons, Are Arrest

ARMENIAN WOMEN, WHO WERE ENTERTAINING RESTAURANT PATRONS, ARE ARRESTED IN TURKEY

news.am
February 07, 2012 | 10:01

Eighteen foreign women-including two minors-, who were working in a
restaurant in Turkey’s Kocaeli province, are taken into custody.

These women were illegally working as entertainers for the restaurant’s
patrons, Turkey’s Anadolu News Agency informs.

And there are women from Armenia among the arrestees. It is noted
that these women were taken to the department on foreigners’ affairs,
and that they will be deported from Turkey.

Israel’s Front-Line In The South Caucasus

ISRAEL’S FRONT-LINE IN THE SOUTH CAUCASUS
By Tim Judah

THE JC ESSAY
th-caucasus
February 6, 2012

Follow The JC on Twitter

Aghdam is as far as you can go. Travel east, cross Turkey, pass the
snow-capped twin peaks of Ararat, cross Armenia and finally you get
to Nagorno-Karabakh. As the Soviet Union collapsed, this was the
front-line in a brutal war pitting Armenians against Azerbaijanis,
or Azeris. Thousands died and more than a million fled their homes.

Today, Aghdam is an extraordinary place. Once a bustling Azeri town,
it is now nothing but ruins for as far as the eye can see. But what
the eye can’t see is that this long-frozen front-line is also now
part of the global struggle waged between Israel and its enemies.

When Armenian forces took Aghdam in 1993, they destroyed it.

Scrap-metal merchants still root around for pipes and iron, while
the silence is broken as a man on a horse whistles and yelps, driving
his cattle across what was once a busy, provincial Soviet street.

Today, the sky is clear. Just clouds floating across this windswept
empty quarter of the south Caucasus. Often it is not. Flying westwards,
come Azerbaijan’s Israeli drones. And flowing westwards, too, a few
miles from here, as much as one third of Israel’s oil.

Meanwhile, in Jerusalem, a Knesset committee has been debating the
vexed issue of whether the fate of the Armenians in 1915 at the hands
of the Ottomans constituted genocide.

All these elements, in what many see wrongly as a peripheral and
forgettable part of the world, wedged between the Caspian and Black
Seas, seem like random facts. They are not. They are all part of
the geopolitical game being played by Israel, Turkey, Iran, Russia,
the US and energy-hungry Europe.

In relations between the two countries, Azerbaijan, whose population
is nine times smaller than Turkey’s, calls the shots

Step back a moment. In the wake of the collapse of the Russian Empire,
until the triumphant reconquest of Bolshevik forces in 1920, the
three south Caucasian countries of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia
all declared themselves independent. They were to become Soviet
republics but, as everywhere in the region, people and borders did
not sit together well.

Nagorno-Karabakh, for example, had a predominantly Armenian population
but was surrounded by Azeri populated regions. Stalin decreed that
it should be an autonomous region within Soviet Azerbaijan. Another
large region, Nakichevan, which had a majority Azeri population,
was to become an exclave of Azerbaijan, physically separated from
the republic by Armenia and bordering Iran.

In the late 1980s, as the USSR began to crumble, Armenians and
Azeris were drawn into conflict. With the Soviet collapse, Armenia
and Azerbaijan went to war. Nagorno-Karabakh declared independence. A
million people, more Azeris than Armenians, fled or were ethnically
cleansed. The Armenians conquered a corridor to link Karabakh to
Armenia. But not just that. In Soviet times, the region covered 4,400
square kilometres. When the guns fell silent, the Armenians controlled
12,000 square kilometres.

Talks on a settlement of the conflict have ground on ever since. But
the geopolitics of the region have changed. Both Armenia and
Azerbaijan emerged from the war, and from the Soviet collapse,
shattered and poor. Turkey closed its border to Armenia. With its
frontier to Azerbaijan also sealed, Armenia’s only land routes out
are via Iran and Georgia. Armenia remains poor and its population of
about three million has dropped dramatically in the past 20 years,
mostly thanks to emigration.

The situation could not be more different in Azerbaijan. Baku was
famous more than a century ago for one of the world’s first great
oil booms. Now it is booming again. Oil has seen the country’s GDP
explode from $5.2 billion in 2000 to $51 billion in 2010. In 2005,
oil began flowing along a major new pipeline from Baku, via Tbilisi,
the capital of Georgia, to Ceyhan, on the southern coast of Turkey.

According to Elmar Mammadyarov, the Azeri foreign minister, Israel buys
30 per cent of its oil from Azerbaijan, which it gets via the pipeline.

It is hardly surprising then that Israel regards Azerbaijan as a
strategic ally. But the pipeline is extremely vulnerable. At one point,
it runs a mere 12 miles from the front-line with Nagorno -Karabakh. In
the event of a new conflict – possible, if not immediately probable –
the Armenians would cut the pipeline with artillery and rocket oil
platforms in the Caspian. But the Azeris want Karabakh back, or,
at least to start with, the “occupied territories” (those parts held
by the Armenians but, like Aghdam, outside the boundaries of the old
autonomous region). Last year, the Azeris invested $3.2 billion in
their military; more than Armenia’s entire budget.

For Europe, the current strategic game is to gain access to gas from
Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan, which can flow to the European Union
via Azerbaijan, but avoid Russia. It has troops in Armenia and a
radar station in Azerbaijan but it wants control of future pipelines
because of the power and influence that they would give it.

Energy security for the West is important for the US, here as
elsewhere, but there is another element at play. Azeris are Shi’ite
Muslims, but 70 years of the Soviet experience have made them mostly
secular. Meanwhile, the giant to the south is Shi’ite Iran, which
the Azeris often accuse of meddling in their affairs.

Azerbaijan’s record on human rights is poor. But it is a vital
staging post for US and western forces en route to Afghanistan. Most
countries remain coy about selling it arms, in no small measure
because of Nagorno-Karabakh. Israel is not. Last year, for example,
an Israeli-Azeri joint venture opened to produce drones. You don’t
have to look hard on YouTube to find a film of Ilham Aliev, the
Azeri president, visiting the plant in March and pausing to sign a
drone’s wing.

B ut it is what you can’t find that is important. Three years ago,
the US Embassy in Baku wrote a cable on Azeri-Israel relations, which
was then published by Wikileaks. There is no reason to believe that
anything substantial has changed. The cable notes that President Aliev
described relations as similar to an iceberg, in that “nine-tenths
of it is below the surface”.

The cable discussed a 2008 agreement about arms and equipment that
Israel would sell to Azerbaijan. Relations, it said, are “discreet
but close” and “each country finds it easy to identify with the
other’s geopolitical difficulties and both rank Iran as an existential
threat.” Azerbaijan fears Iranian Islamist influence but Iran fears
Azerbaijan, too. Up to 30 million Iranians are ethnic Azeris. While
many are well integrated into Iranian society, over the years there
have been protests demanding greater cultural and language rights. If
the existing low level of conflict between Iran, Israel, the US and
perhaps others turns into a shooting war, it is hard to know whether
Azeri secessionism might develop in Iran. In August, the Iranian armed
forces chief warned President Aliev of a “dark fate” if he continued
the relationship with Israel. There have also been accusations from
Iran that Azerbaijan is attempting to foster ethnic conflict. A key
area of co-operation with Israel is in intelligence. This, said the
cable, is “extensive”.

There are estimated to be some 30,000 former Azeri Jews in Israel and
they act as a bridge between the two countries. Their leaders always
say that there was no antisemitism in Azerbaijan, and that this is
one reason for the close relations between the two countries. Yet Tom
de Waal, a Caucasus expert at the Carnegie Endowment in Washington,
says that it would be a mistake to believe that Azerbaijan’s enthusiasm
for close relations with Israel is more than an elite phenomenon. Most
Azeris, he says, “generally buy into a Muslim consensus with regard
to Israel and the Palestinians.”

Enter Turkey. Until 1937, the Azeris, as a political nation, did not
exist; they were simply Turks. In the new Soviet order, that changed.

Since independence, relations with Turkey have been very close –
most watch Turkish television and its influence is important. Yet,
it sometimes seems as if, in relations between the two countries,
Azerbaijan, whose population is nine times smaller than Turkey’s,
calls the shots. In 2008, a period of Turkish-Armenian rapprochement
ended abruptly after Azerbaijan objected on the grounds that this
should not happen before the Karabakh issue was resolved.

L ast October, Turkey agreed to a major deal not only to buy gas
coming from Azerbaijan but also to transport it westwards. Just before
that, however, the Turkish ambassador in Baku reminded the Azeris
of how Turkey had listened to Azeri objections to its rapprochement
with Armenia and now expected a payback in terms of relations with
Israel. This was brushed off. Business between Israel and Azerbaijan
is booming and an Azeri oil and gas company is prospecting in Israeli
waters.

All this is monitored carefully in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia.

Relations with Israel have been good, but for two nations which have
shared such a tragic history, “we could have done a lot better”,
argues Salpi Ghazarian who runs Yerevan’s Civilitas Foundation.

In the dark days of war with Azerbaijan, Iran supplied fuel to Armenia
and now supplies it with gas. As Brenda Shaffer, of Haifa University,
points out: “Iran talks about Islam and helps the Christian Armenians.”

And if the interests of the state come before ideology then that
is true for Israel, too. For fear of offending Turkey, the Knesset
has never recognised that the fate of the Armenians at the hands of
the Ottoman Empire in 1915, in which up to 1.5 million people died,
amounted to “genocide”.

Now, in the wake of the collapse of its relations with Turkey,
a Knesset committee very publicly discussed the matter in December.

But, when it comes to a final decision on the matter, it is more than
likely that Israel will weigh up whether this could affect relations
with Azerbaijan, although Shaffer doubts it would, as they are,
she notes, above all relations of “state interests”.

One Armenian official said wryly that Armenia hoped that the Knesset
discussion was not just “situational” given the state of Israel-Turkish
relations. Still there are at least two other issues which prevent
good relations becoming far better, quite apart from Israel selling
weapons to Azerbaijan.

Armenia is concerned about the dwindling number of Armenians in Israel
and especially property in the Armenian quarter of Jerusalem.

Armenia also does not want to jeopardise the position of hundreds
of thousands of Armenians across the Middle East. “We exercise great
care of the physical protection of our people,” says the official.

Put simply, says Ghazarian, in view of the precarious position of
Christians in the Arab world, Armenia does not want to give anyone
a reason to make Armenians in Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere insecure.

Meanwhile, for most people, the south Caucasus is out of sight,
out of mind. But, as the 2008 Georgian war with Russia showed, it
is also a volatile place. Nagorno-Karabakh is often described as a
frozen conflict. It is today, but tomorrow it may not be. The region
is, like Israel’s own surroundings, a rough neighbourhood, but the
links between the two are far deeper than most people know. In May,
the Eurovision song contest will be held in Azerbaijan. Remember that
when you hear the words: “Hello Baku, this is Jerusalem calling.”

Tim Judah is a journalist who specialises in Balkan affairs

http://www.thejc.com/comment-and-debate/comment/63154/israels-front-line-sou

ZH: Genocidio Armeno, Procura Indaga Contro Ministro Turco Bagis

ZH: GENOCIDIO ARMENO, PROCURA INDAGA CONTRO MINISTRO TURCO BAGIS

Bluewin
,539783/ZH__genocidio_armeno,_procura_indaga_contro_ministro_turco_Bagis/it/news/svizzera/sda/
6 feb 2012
Svizzera

La Procura zurighese ha aperto un’indagine preliminare per
“discriminazione razziale” contro Egemen Bagis: il ministro turco per
gli Affari Europei, giunto in Svizzera a fine gennaio per il Forum
economico mondiale (WEF) di Davos, avrebbe negato il genocidio armeno
del 1915 e violato quindi la norma antirazzismo del codice penale.

Le dichiarazioni contestate sarebbero state fatte lo scorso 28 gennaio
a Zurigo dove Bagis ha partecipato a un concerto della cantante sua
connazionale Sezen Aksu. Secondo il giornale turco in lingua inglese
“Today’s Zaman”, a margine del concerto il ministro ha dichiarato:
“Ci troviamo oggi in Svizzera e io dico che i fatti del 1915 non sono
stati un genocidio. Lasciate che vengano e mi arrestino”.

Diversi media turchi hanno riferito le dichiarazioni di Bagis. Queste
non sono piaciute all’Associazione Svizzera-Armenia, che munite di
ritagli di giornali si è rivolta alla Procura.

“Abbiamo avviato indagini di polizia”, ha dichiarato oggi all’ats un
rappresentante di quest’ultima, confermando una informazione della
“NZZ am Sonntag”. “Trattandosi di un reato perseguibile d’ufficio siamo
costretti ad occuparci della faccenda”, ha proseguito, aggiungendo di
non poter precisare per il momento se sara o no aperto un procedimento
penale.

http://www.bluewin.ch/it/index.php/565

Baku: Speaker Of Azerbaijani Parliament: It Will Not Do Credit To Fr

SPEAKER OF AZERBAIJANI PARLIAMENT: IT WILL NOT DO CREDIT TO FRANCE TO POLITICIZE THE HISTORICAL EVENTS THAT HAPPENED LONG AGO AND MAKE THEM THE THEME OF DISCUSSION AT THE PARLIAMENT

APA
Feb 6 2012
Azerbaijan

Delegation of French parliament visits Azerbaijan

Baku. Parvin Abbasov – APA. Speaker of the Azerbaijani Parliament
Ogtay Asadov received the delegation led by head of France-Azerbaijan
Working Group, Senator Nathalie Goulet. Spokesman for the parliament
Akif Tevekkuloglu told APA that senators Sylvie Goy-Chavent, Jean
Marie Bockel, Herve Maurey, Andre Reichard, Jeanny Lorgeoux also
attended the meeting.

Ogtay Asadov spoke about the relations between Azerbaijan and France.

He said the Azerbaijani government, the head of state Ilham Aliyev
attaches great importance to the development of cooperation with
France. Speaker of the parliament said the Azerbaijanis are concerned
over the bill on the co-called “Armenian genocide” passed in France,
which is considered the cradle of democracy.

“Taking into account that France is a co-chair of the Minsk Group
dealing with the resolution of Nagorno Karabakh conflict, the concern
of the Azerbaijanis is understandable. We believe that the final step
for the enactment of the bill will not be taken due to the actions of
the progressive persons like you, the French Constitutional Council
will prevent enactment of the bill aiming to restrict human rights
and freedoms,” he said.

Ogtay Asadov said historians must deal with history. He said it
will not do credit to France to politicize the historical events
that happened long ago and make them the theme of discussion at the
parliament. He mentioned the Khojaly genocide, which happened recently,
displacement of one million Azerbaijanis and said the attempts to
close eyes to such cases, discuss a made-up issue, exaggerate it are
not understandable.

“We call on the French politicians to be delicate regarding this
issue,” he said.

The guests expressed their satisfaction with the meetings held in
Azerbaijan. They highly appreciated the visit and expressed their
confidence in the development of Azerbaijan-France relations.

The French senators also met with the members of the parliament’s
committee on international and interparliamentary relations. Chairman
of the committee Samad Seyidov also attended the meeting. The guests
were informed about Azerbaijan’s concern over the bill passed by the
French senate. The guests expressed their regret over the passage of
the bill and said historians must deal with history.

The members of the delegation had voted against the bill criminalizing
the denial of the genocides recognized by the law at the French
National Assembly and Senate.

Malatya Municipality In Turkey Agrees To Rebuild Demolished Armenian

MALATYA MUNICIPALITY IN TURKEY AGREES TO REBUILD DEMOLISHED ARMENIAN SHRINE

PanARMENIAN.Net
February 7, 2012 – 10:19 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The municipality in the eastern Turkish province
of Malatya has agreed to rebuild a complex involving a chapel, a
guard house and an annex for washing the dead inside a historical
Armenian cemetery after municipal workers demolished it on Feb 3,
Hurriyet Daily News reported.

“The folk in the street cried when they saw that our ‘Last Prayer’
[complex] was demolished. I don’t think it to be ‘neighborhood
pressure.’ There is some pressure, but it emanates from sources unknown
to us,” Hosrof Köletavitoglu, the head of the Malatya Philanthropists’
Association (HAYDER), said.

Malatya Municipality said that the guard house had been brought down
due to complaints issued by the local populace and that the chapel
had been mistakenly demolished.

“They had said the guard box wasn’t suitable here and decided to
demolish [it.] Now they are taking over the construction of the
entire complex by themselves,” Köletavitoglu said on behalf of a
group of Malatya Armenians residing in Istanbul who met with officials
regarding the matter on Feb 6 morning.

The municipality promised to push forward with the project without
making any additional changes, Köletavitoglu said, adding they were
also going to certify that promise in the governor’s office through
a notary.

“We are going to purse this to the end,” he said. “We had just
built the complex with money we collected from Armenians of Malatya
[residing] in Istanbul and the diaspora. The demolition came about
just as we were finishing it.”

The project had originally been drawn up by the Patriarchate of
Turkish-Armenians.

The cemetery which measures thousands of acres in size also contains
the burial grounds of the family members of Hrant Dink, the chief
editor of the weekly Agos, who was gunned down in front of his office
in Istanbul on Jan 19, 2007.

“We were going to hold a mass by organizing a tour on June 30 to
bring Armenians originating from Malatya here. It will be a little
difficult to hold the mass under these circumstances,” he said.

The Turkish authorities nationalized the cemetery in the late 1940s,
while only some two acres are still owned by the Armenian community.

Armenia’s Army Day Is Celebrated In Canada

ARMENIA’S ARMY DAY IS CELEBRATED IN CANADA

news.am
February 07, 2012 | 13:55

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s Embassy in Canada organized on February 4 a
reception devoted to the Armenian Armed Forces Day 20th anniversary,
MFA informed Armenian News-NEWS.am.

The event brought together senior officials from Canada’s Foreign
Affairs Ministry, ambassadors and diplomats accredited in Ottawa,
senior clergy from the Armenian Apostolic Church, and Canadian
Armenians.

Armenia’s Ambassador to Canada, Armen Yeganyan, welcomed those present
with opening remarks, and delivered a brief presentation on the past
twenty years of Armenia’s statehood and its Armed Forces.

No Applications From Syria For Getting Asylum In Armenia

NO APPLICATIONS FROM SYRIA FOR GETTING ASYLUM IN ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
FEBRUARY 6, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 6, ARMENPRESS: The number of applicants for getting
asylum in Armenia from Syria has not grown. Ruzanna Petrosyan, chief
specialist of the asylum affairs department of the State Migration
Service affiliated to the Ministry of Territorial Administration,
told Armenpress that there is no information to what countries the
representatives of the Armenian community of Syria have applied to get
asylum. “We are quite surprised for not receiving any applications
from Syria. We suppose that people will apply for getting asylum as
the clashes will cause flows,” Petrosyan said.

She said in case of Iraq when pressures against Christians started,
Armenians started abandoning that country. The absence of the
applications shows that the situation in Syria is not so dangerous,
for Armenians in particular.

As a result of domestic clashes in Syria, three people have applied
for getting asylum in Armenia in 2011. Their applications have been
satisfied.

Police Arguments For Hayk Gevorgyan~Rs Arrest Aren~Rt Convincing, Sa

POLICE ARGUMENTS FOR HAYK GEVORGYAN’S ARREST AREN’T CONVINCING, SAY MEDIA, HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANIZATIONS

epress.am
02.06.2012

The Yerevan-based Committee to Protect Freedom of Expression and
the Yerevan Press Club are indignant at the Feb. 3 arrest of Hayk
Gevorgyan, a prominent journalist and correspondent for local daily
Haykakan Jamanak (“Armenian Times”).

“Surveying the information disseminated by Haykakan Jamanak and
the Armenian police regarding the incident that became cause for
the arrest provides grounds to conclude that choosing arrest as the
precautionary measure is devoid of sufficient legal justification,”
reads the joint statement.

The authors of the statement don’t consider police arguments on
the need for arrest to be convincing: Gevorgyan was wanted by law
enforcement officials for more than 10 days, a period in which he
continued his professional activities and entered various state
structures, including the government building.

“Moreover, during this time, he had contact with the police
investigator – demanding that which is legally required, he [called] to
check why he is being asked to come in for questioning. The journalist
never received a clarification. Meanwhile, police insist that they
supposedly duly notified Hayk Gevorgyan. There’s the impression that
conditions were intentionally created with the aim of using arrest
as the precautionary measure against the journalist.

“We demand that the precautionary measure chosen for Hayk Gevorgyan
be changed immediately, that he be released and that an impartial and
transparent investigation into the incident that occurred be ensured.

We call on the country’s political leadership to take effective steps
with the purpose of excluding groundless persecution, accusations
and pressure on journalists and news outlets,” reads the statement.

26-Year-Old Man Is Killed In Etchmiadzin City

26-YEAR-OLD MAN IS KILLED IN ETCHMIADZIN CITY

news.am
February 06, 2012 | 10:58

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s Police Force received a call from a hospital,
on February 4, informing that the dead body of Vagharshapat city
resident Artak Simonyan, 26, was transferred to the hospital, and
that there were gunshot wounds on the body.

It was found out that an unknown person had fired shots at Simonyan,
nearby a barber shop in Etchmiadzin city on the same day, had
killed him and subsequently escaped, Police Force informs Armenian
News-NEWS.am.

The circumstances are being ascertained, and an investigation is
launched.

Du Negationnisme, Perspective D’un Psychanalyste ?

DU NEGATIONNISME, PERSPECTIVE D’UN PSYCHANALYSTE ?
Stephane

armenews.com
lundi 6 fevrier 2012

Par Jean-Jacques Moscovitz – Membre fondateur de Psychanalyse Actuelle

Cet expose a ete fait lors du ” The International Conference
‘Operation 1005 : Nazi Attempts to Erase the Evidence of Mass Murder
in Eastern and Central Europe, 1942-1944’ June 15-16, 2009 Paris,
France” co-organise par le Centre des hautes etudes sur l’Holocauste,
le Musee Memorial de l’Holocauste des Etats-Unis, Washington, D.C. ;
l’association Yahad-In Unum dirige par el père P.Desbois ; le Collège
des Bernardins, Paris l’Universite Paris IV-Sorbonne ; avec le soutien
de la Commission europeenne.

Face a l’irresponsabilite du peche par ignorance jusqu’alors prônee par
Jesus aux Chretiens, aujourd’hui du fait de la rupture de l’Histoire,
c’est l’inverse qui est a soutenir : ” De nos jours, inversement,
enonce Gunther Anders, l’ignorance de ce que nous ne pouvons pas ne
pas savoir, l’ignorance est la faute elle-meme “.

Entendons : aujourd’hui, la responsabilite du sujet singulier face a
ce qu’il s’est passe est d’autant plus a mettre en evidence qu’elle
s’efface regulièrement. On veut l’effacer. Alors que Je est responsable
de son inconscient plus qu’avant. Car exiger de savoir ce que nous
avons ” dans notre tète ” est majeur.

C’est ainsi que Saint-Luc annonce, dit Gunther Anders, que ” nous
ne savons pas ce que nous faisons “. Gunther Anders, lui, vise ici
la notion de refoulement au sens de Freud, en tant qu’ensemble des
processus symboliques de prise de conscience ou d’occultation : ”
…le refoulement ne vise plus toute la verite d’aujourd’hui ” . Car,
c’est mon propos, existe la necessite d’un autre operateur. Voila
pourquoi je propose la notion de forclusion construite, soit la
mise en ~uvre d’un non-savoir voulu et ignore concernant l’acte,
le crime dans ses consequences actuelles. Et cela implique des lors
que la discipline psychanalytique en tant que pratique de parole,
est conduite a interroger son fondement, le refoulement, et tous les
processus de prise de conscience ou au contraire du refus de savoir.

Refus su certes mais aussi celui qui se veut non su .

Saluons ici la conduite au niveau collectif dont a fait preuve Vatican
II, en levant une telle occultation par un acte de repentance, en
particulier en France vis a vis de la complicite de l’Eglise dans
la Shoah. Voila le signe d’une prise de conscience europeenne de ce
qu’il s’est produit. Est-ce un vrai debut ?

Quant au psychanalyste, ici invite a donner son approche, disons que
dans l’intime de son ecoute et de ce qui le pousse a savoir, il a a
reperer les consequences de ce qu’i s’est passe au niveau de l’ensemble
des processus de symbolisation de la realite et de leurs avatars.

Gunther Anders, dans son approche du refoulement au sens de Freud,
montre comment se constitue l’ignorance, voulue et ignoree comme
telle, du cote du criminel : une telle ignorance voulue se produit,
selon lui, pendant, après et meme avant les actions de meurtres,
ce qui serait en quelque sorte leur condition prealable. Eichmann
n’etait pas criminel avant le crime, mais son crime pose la question :
a-t-il pu/voulu reconnaître au sein de son intime l’existence d’une
pensee de l’acte qu’il commettait ? C’est la la fonction de la ”
non-pensee ” avance Gunther Anders, pensee devenant alors strictement
technique, equivalente a une machine qui obeit aux ordres des lors
que le collectif, le politique promeut le genocide d’Etat.

L’occasion nous a ete donnee de nommer une telle non-pensee ”
silenciation “[4]. Soit une deshumanisation de la parole.

A suivre cette hypothèse que j’adopte ici, cela signifie que dans
l’effectuation du crime dans l’extermination des juifs d’Europe,
le criminel construit en lui une deshumanisation de son rapport a la
realite, et cela deja avant le crime. Voila ce qui est different du
cas habituel où une fois le delit de crime commis, depuis son acte,
quelque chose change du cote de l’intime du criminel, de sa structure
psychique. La au contraire, se fabrique une sorte de non-pensee avant,
un non-changement de la perception de la realite après le crime. Et
ce serait deja le crime, sans que soit advenu du criminel. En tous
cas en tant que responsable dans le fait de le savoir. Coupable de
le commettre, il l’est infiniment plus a ne pas reconnaître qu’il a
construit en lui les conditions et de l’acte et de l’ignorer, disons
de le ‘negationner’ pour l’accomplir. Non pas tant qu’il s’agisse d’en
attendre l’aveu, soit la logique de le morale du droit qui humanise le
criminel, mais il n’y a pas la les conditions psychiques d’une parole
se sachant ‘negationnante’. Forclusion construite, retranchement
voulu et ignore.

Apparaît la un point inherent a cette hypothèse, celui du changement
du statut de la mort : un meurtre de la mort . Dans une telle
effectuation, la mort devient un objet comme les autres : distribuable,
consommable, attribuable. Crime sans auteur en quelque sorte.

C’est dire que les negationnistes le sont avant le crime : les premiers
negationnistes sont les nazis eux-memes.

pour lire la suite cliquer sur le lien

https://sites.google.com/site/psychanalyseactuel/textes/du-negationnisme-perspective-d-un-psychanalyste