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Reshid Akif Pasha

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Occupation
  
Ottoman statesman


Name
  
Reshid Pasha

Reshid Akif Pasha

Born
  
1863
Ioannina, Ioannina Eyalet

Died
  
15 April 1920(1920-04-15) (aged 56-57) Istanbul, Ottoman Empire

Known for
  
Testimony about the Armenian Genocide

Reshid Akif Pasha (1863 – 15 April 1920, in Turkish: Reşid Akif Paşa) was an Ottoman statesman during the last decades of the Ottoman Empire. Throughout his career as a politician, Reshid Akif Paşa served as governor, minister of the interior, and in the Council of State. He is also noted for providing important testimony in the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide.

Contents

Life and career

Reshid Akif was born in Ioannina, today's Greece, in 1863 and was of Albanian ethnicity (Albanian: Reshid Aqif Pasha). He was the son of Mehmet Ali Pasha, an Ottoman statesman and governor. Akif then moved to Constantinople (now Istanbul) to study at Galatasaray High School. He became a politician and the governor of Sivas in 1901. He served as governor until 1908. He eventually moved to Istanbul where he was appointed as minister of the interior on 6 August 1909 for a few months, but resigned on health grounds; in the same year he became a member of the Senate of the Ottoman Empire.

After Talat Pasha's resignation in 1918, Reşid Akif was appointed to the Council of State under Ahmed Izzet Pasha's government. However, Izzet Pasha's cabinet was dissolved, and Akif Pasha again resigned a few weeks after appointment. He was then appointed to the new Council of Ministers in 1918 by the government of Damat Ferid Pasha.

Armenian Genocide testimony

Reshid Akif Pasha is known for providing important testimony on the Armenian Genocide during a session of the Ottoman parliament on 21 November 1918. Akif Pasha stated that during his short tenure as the president of the Council of State, he uncovered documents pertaining to the deportation of Armenians. The documents displayed the process in which official statements made use of vague terminology when ordering deportation only to be clarified by special orders ordering "massacres" sent directly from the Committee of Union and Progress headquarters or often the residence of Talat Pasha himself.

He testified as follows:

While humbly occupying my last post in the Cabinet, which barely lasted 25 to 30 days, I became cognizant of some secrets. I came across something strange in this respect. It was this official order for deportation, issued by the notorious Interior Ministry and relayed to the provinces. However, following [the issuance of] this official order, the Central Committee [of Union and Progress] undertook to send an ominous circular order to all points [in the provinces], urging the expediting of the execution of the accursed mission of the brigands. Thereupon, the brigands proceeded to act and the atrocious massacres were the result.

He continued by saying: "I am ashamed as a Muslim, I am ashamed as an Ottoman statesman. What a stain on the reputation of the Ottoman Empire, these criminal people ..."

The testimony was considered "extremely remarkable and noteworthy" by the contemporaneous local press. It was published by many newspapers in its entirety due to its "special importance". Historian Vahakn Dadrian has concluded that his statements are the "most incriminating evidence" for the systematic killings of the Armenian Genocide.

Death and legacy

Reshid Akif Pasha died on 15 April 1920 in Istanbul. He is best remembered as an Ottoman politician who provided important testimony in the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide. An elementary school in Zara, Turkey, is named after him.

References

Reshid Akif Pasha Wikipedia