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Delayed parliamentary visit to Turkey goes ahead

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  • Delayed parliamentary visit to Turkey goes ahead

    SwissInfo
    Aug 30 2004

    Delayed parliamentary visit to Turkey goes ahead

    Swiss President Joseph Deiss (left) met Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip
    Erdogan at a World Economic Forum meeting in January (Keystone)

    A delegation of Swiss parliamentarians heads to Turkey on Monday for
    a visit that was originally scheduled for November last year.

    The Senate foreign affairs committee said the five-day trip was a
    sign of `improved bilateral relations' between Bern and Ankara.


    The committee called off last year's scheduled trip at short notice
    after Turkey cancelled a visit by the Swiss foreign minister,
    Micheline Calmy-Rey, amid an escalating diplomatic row.

    Turkish sensibilities were offended after two Swiss cantonal
    parliaments officially recognised the 1915 killings of hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians in Turkey as genocide. The federal parliament
    followed suit last December.

    But Ankara denied it had withdrawn Calmy-Rey's invitation, saying it
    had merely requested that the visit be put back.

    `Welcome'

    The parliamentary delegation, led by Peter Briner, hopes its visit
    will contribute to a further easing of tensions between the two
    countries. Meetings are planned with foreign minister Abdullah Gül
    and Kurdish human rights activist Leyla Zana.

    `A year ago relations were strained. It was doubtful whether we could
    have had fruitful discussions in Turkey and met the people we wanted
    to meet,' Briner told swissinfo.

    `Today, the situation is better and we will be able to talk to a lot
    of people. Our partners in the Turkish parliament and the Turkish
    ambassador have told us that we are welcome in Turkey,' he added.

    The delegation leader said the main focus of the meetings would be on
    economic and technical cooperation and Turkey's application for
    European Union membership, as well as the treatment of minorities and
    human rights questions.

    Armenia question

    But Briner declined to say whether the question of the treatment of
    the Armenians would be raised.

    `We do not want to make moral judgements ourselves about this
    terrible time in history - that is a matter for historians,' he
    commented. `We also believe that every country must evaluate its own
    past.'

    Sarkis Shahinian, co-president of the Switzerland-Armenia
    Association, welcomed the delegation's visit to Turkey as a chance to
    broach the issue of human rights.

    `The time is right to raise the question of minorities and human
    rights with Turkey since its government wants to join the European
    Union and to act as a bridge between the western world and Islam,'
    Shahinian told swissinfo.

    `This is the moment for Turkey to put its past straight and to
    respect human rights in line with the membership requirements of the
    EU,' he said.
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