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Turkey Chides Canada Over Armenia Genocide Vote

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  • Turkey Chides Canada Over Armenia Genocide Vote

    Turkey Chides Canada Over Armenia Genocide Vote

    22.04.2004

    By Gareth Jones

    ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey on Thursday condemned the Canadian
    parliament's decision to recognize the 1915 killing of Armenians by
    Ottoman forces as genocide and warned of damage to bilateral ties.

    Canada's parliament voted 153-68 on Wednesday in support of a motion
    classifying the events of 90 years ago as genocide, disregarding an
    appeal from the Canadian government.

    Armenians say some 1.5 million of their people were deliberately
    slaughtered by Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1923.

    Turkey denies charges of genocide, saying Armenians were among victims
    of a partisan war during World War One as the Ottoman Empire collapsed.
    Ankara accuses Armenians of carrying out massacres while siding with
    invading Russian troops.

    "We strongly condemn the approval by Canada's Federal Parliament of this
    decision which follows (the pressure of) marginal groups despite our
    objections," the Turkish Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

    "This decision will benefit neither Canadian Armenians nor Armenia.
    Responsibility for all the negative consequences of this decision
    belongs to the Canadian politicians," it added.

    The ministry did not say what these consequences might be, but Fazli
    Corman, the Turkish embassy councillor in Ottawa, earlier cited the
    example of Canadian companies seeking to sign contracts in Turkey.

    Canadian Foreign Minister Bill Graham said the motion would not alter
    Ottawa's official policy, that while the events of 1915 were a tragedy,
    they did not constitute genocide.

    "VOLATILE REGION"

    Canada's embassy in Ankara issued a statement calling for reconciliation
    between Turks and Armenians. It also urged their governments to deal
    with the issue of the alleged genocide and to work for greater stability
    in their "volatile region."

    Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic relations and their border is
    closed because of the Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh, a
    territory populated by Christian Armenians but assigned to Muslim
    Azerbaijan in Soviet times. Turkey has close linguistic and cultural
    ties with oil-rich Azerbaijan.

    Turkey's Foreign Ministry accused "narrow-minded Canadian politicians"
    of fomenting ethnic and religious hatred between "people of different
    ethnic backgrounds who live in peace."

    Earlier this week, Turkey also criticized a reference to the alleged
    genocide on an Armenian monument unveiled in Poland. The word
    "slandered" the Turkish nation, the Foreign Ministry said, and hurt
    Turkey's historically warm ties with Poland.

    Parliaments in Russia, France and Switzerland, have also adopted motions
    describing the events of 1915 as genocide.

    Turkey froze official visits to France and temporarily blocked French
    firms from entering lucrative defense contracts in 2001 after the French
    parliament backed the Armenian case. France is home to Europe's biggest
    Armenian diaspora.

    The U.S. Congress dropped a similar resolution in 2000 after the White
    House warned it would harm U.S. security interests in the Middle East.

    Turkey is a key NATO (news - web sites) ally guarding Europe's
    southeastern flank and its secular democracy is often held up by
    Washington as an example to be emulated by the rest of the Muslim world.
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