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ANKARA: Arinc condemns Canadian House of Representatives Decision

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  • ANKARA: Arinc condemns Canadian House of Representatives Decision

    ARINC CONDEMNS CANADIAN HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DECISION

    Turkish Daily News
    June 12, 2004

    ANKARA - Speaker of Parliament Bulent Arinc sent a condemnation letter
    to the Canadian House of Representatives President Peter Milliken
    relating to a decision of the Canadian House of Representatives that
    approved on April 21, 2004 the recognition of the so-called Armenian
    Genocide and accepted it as crime of humanity.

    Stating that the interpretation of the tragic event, which caused
    the loss of lives during Ottoman rule in 1915, to wrong historical
    data is a completely intolerable mistake, Arinc noted in his letter:
    "Turkish Parliament believes that national parliaments are not the
    right places to interpret historical events ... National parliaments
    should refrain from biased initiatives which carry the threat of
    awakening hatred between the public upon the alleged and ungrounded
    claims made by the marginal sectors of ethnic groups or third party
    representatives about other nations."

    Indicating that, with this act, the Canadian House of Representatives
    owns the responsibility of the negative developments that could
    possibly develop between Turkey and Canada, Arinc stressed that
    this decision fell in contradiction with the normalization efforts
    of relations between the two neighbors Turkey and Armenia, in such a
    sensitive part of the world. Arinc expressed Turkey's sorrow for the
    non-fulfilment of the responsibilities by those, who approved such a
    humiliating and unjust decision, in such a sensitive period when the
    world needs international solidarity and cooperation against violence
    and intolerance.

    The Armenians claimed that during the Ottoman Empire their ancestors
    were executed for allegedly helping the invading Russian army during
    World War I. Turkey, heir of the Ottoman Empire, rejects the genocide
    claim, insisting that Armenians were killed in civil unrest during
    the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey has fought hard to block international attempts to raise the
    issue of the alleged Armenian genocide, while Armenia -- with its
    seven-million strong diaspora -- has been pressing for international
    recognition of the so-called genocide.
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