Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: British Parliament urged to disown Blue Book

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: British Parliament urged to disown Blue Book

    Journal of Turkish weekly
    April 14 2005

    British Parliament urged to disown Blue Book

    The New Anatolian
    14 April 2005


    Ankara - In a letter signed by Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan and
    opposition leader Deniz Baykal, Turkish National Parliament asks the
    British Parliament to declare 'The Blue Book' invalid as a historical
    document.

    The Turkish Parliament has prepared a letter to be sent to British
    Parliament urging it to disown a World War I era document called "The
    Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, 1915-1916," more
    commonly known as "The Blue Book."

    The letter was first signed by ruling Justice and Development (AK)
    Party leader and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and main
    opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) leader Deniz Baykal at
    Parliament. The six-page letter was then openedfor signing by all
    lawmakers in Parliament.

    `Considering that Great Britain's Parliament decided to publish
    Arnold Toynbee's work as a reference book in 1916, we kindly request
    that the British Parliament shed light on a significant part of our
    joint history by declaring The Blue Book invalid and unfounded as a
    historical document,' the letter says.

    The letter stresses that the book was part of a campaign carried out
    to urge the U.S. to join World War I. It emphasized that the Ministry
    of Information (Wellington House) prepared two important reports
    called `German brutality' and `Turkish brutality' as part of this
    campaign. The letter refers to the late Foreign Minister Austin
    Chamberlain, who said that the report about the Germans was just
    unfounded war propaganda in a speech to the House of Lords in 1925.
    It also says that Arnold Toynbee, one of the authors of the book,
    admitted that the book was war propaganda.

    Some 150 people told their stories in the book and the letter goes on
    to say that 59 of them were later found out to have been
    missionaries, 52 were Armenian activists while seven were Armenian
    Tashnak rebels. The remaining 32 names cited in the book were
    fictitious or the same people already mentioned in the book.

    `The Blue Book was an extremely successful piece of propaganda by
    Britain during the war but it's not a trustworthy historical source
    about the Ottoman Armenians revolt and the measures taken by the
    Ottoman state against this revolt,' the letter says. "The book
    doesn't mention the Armenian gangs which joined forces with the
    Russians against the Ottoman armies; killing of Ottoman state
    officials; cutting of communication lines; attempts to invade Ottoman
    cities; massacre of Turks in Van; and exile of over 1 million Muslims
    from their land by Russians and Armenians."
Working...
X