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Turkey rejects European pressure for Armenian genocide recognition

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  • Turkey rejects European pressure for Armenian genocide recognition

    Turkey rejects European pressure for Armenian genocide recognition

    EUbusiness
    07/04/2005

    Turkey will not bow to European Union pressure to recognize the World
    War I killings of Armenians as genocide as a condition for joining
    the EU, Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer said Thursday.

    "We are witnessing efforts to bring many issues not directly related
    to our (EU) membership process before us as covert conditions," among
    them allegations that more than a million Armenians were victims of
    genocide under Ottoman rule, Sezer told a press conference at the
    military academy here.

    "It is wrong and unjust for our European friends to press Turkey on
    these issues," he said. "They should know that it is not possible for
    demands imposed on us and devoid of just foundations to be accepted."

    Turkey has recently faced mounting calls from within the EU, which
    it hopes to join, to acknowledge the massacres as genocide, something
    it systematically rejects.

    Some EU politicans have said that the genocide claims will be one
    of the issues Turkey must address as it prepares to launch lengthy
    membership talks with the EU on October 3.

    "These claims (of genocide) upset and hurt the feelings of the Turkish
    nation," Sezer said. "What needs to be done is research, investigate
    and discuss history, based on documents and without prejudice.

    "The basis of such discussions should be scientific and not political,"
    he said.

    The Armenian massacres of World War I are one of the most controversial
    episodes in Turkish history.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died in orchestrated
    killings nine decades ago during the final years of the Ottoman Empire,
    the predecessor of modern Turkey.

    Turkey, on the other hand, argues that 300,000 Armenians and thousands
    of Turks were killed in what was civil strife during World War I when
    the Armenians, bacvked by Russia, rose against their Ottoman rulers.
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