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Turkey's first Armenian museum opens in Istanbul

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  • Turkey's first Armenian museum opens in Istanbul

    Turkey's first Armenian museum opens in Istanbul

    Agence France Presse
    Dec 6 2004

    ISTANBUL, Dec 5 (AFP) - Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Sunday
    opened the first museum in Turkey dedicated to the country's Armenian
    minority, which he said would help dispel accusations that genocide
    was committed against Armenians under Ottoman rule.

    "This museum will throw light on history for current and future
    generations," Erdogan said at the opening ceremony of the museum
    inside a 175-year-old Armenian hospital in Istanbul.

    "Anyone who casts an eye on the pieces in this museum will get a
    straight look at our common history," he said.

    Erdogan was referring to Armenian accusations that up to 1.5 million
    of their kinsmen were massacred in orchestrated killings nine decades
    ago under the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of modern Turkey.

    Turkey categorically rejects claims of genocide and says 300,000
    Armenians and thousands of Turks were killed in civil strife as the
    Ottoman Empire fell apart, with Armenian rebels siding with invading
    Russian troops.

    "Instead of allowing (museum) pieces such as this to throw light
    on history, facts are being distorted through speculation and
    disinformation," Erdogan said.

    The Turkish leader said Turks and Armenians had lived peacefully in
    the region for centuries and pledged that his government would watch
    over the rights of the Armenian minority.

    "As the prime minister of this country, I deem it a duty to protect
    the rights of these citizens along with others and to stand by them
    in good times and bad", Erdogan said.

    Turkey, an aspiring candidate for membership of the European Union,
    is under pressure from the 25-nation bloc to enable its recognized
    minorities and the Kurds to fully exercise their rights.

    Turkey, basing itself on the terms of the Lausanne Treaty of 1923,
    recognizes only non-Muslim Turks -- Armenians, Greeks and Jews --
    as minorities, but not the more than 13 million Kurds living in
    the southeast.
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