British Justice and Turkish Leaders Accused of War Crimes Against Armenians in World War I

Paperback
(ISBN: 978-1-909382-17-6)
$45.00
2015 London
382 pages
Size: 7" x 10"
Language(s): English

Walter Bandazian traces developments which led to the arrest, detention, and finally, the release of Young Turks and their henchmen accused of committing war crimes during and after World War I against the Christian population of Ottoman Turkey - and most notably Armenians. The primary focus of his work concerns the role played by British authorities in the Near East in addressing the Armenian Genocide and initiating the first international effort to bring war criminals to trial, even before the Nuremberg trials of 1945-49.

However, as Bandazian also shows, the anticipated trials never materialized because of several key factors, including the lack of appropriate legal mechanisms, difficulties in securing evidence on the ground, and political opposition from different quarters. Most of the present work is composed of documents which informed British authorities of the guilt of such civil, parliamentary and military functionaries as Memduh Bey in Erzinjan, Arif Fezi Bey in Diyarbakir, Mustafa Abdul Halik in Bitlis and Suleiman Faik Pasha in Harpoot.

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