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ATHENS: Greek Armenians Doubt Turkey's EU Mentality

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  • ATHENS: Greek Armenians Doubt Turkey's EU Mentality

    Greek Armenians Doubt Turkey's EU Mentality

    Reuters
    Thursday, April 14, 2005

    By Karolos Grohmann

    Armenians in Greece said on Thursday EU hopeful Turkey is still a long
    way away from becoming a true European nation.

    Greece has one of the largest and oldest Armenian communities in Europe
    numbering more than 55,000 people. The Armenian National Committee of
    Greece says some 1.5 million Armenians died between 1915 and 1923 and
    wants Turkey to recognize it as genocide before it joins the European Union.

    Turkey is due to start entry talks with the bloc on Oct. 3, but rejects
    the claim saying Armenians were victims of a World War One partisan
    conflict in which Christian Armenians also killed many Muslim Turks.

    "Imagine if Germany persistently denied ever having committed the
    holocaust against the Jews, but still wanted to be a member of the EU.
    What kind of respectability would Germany have in Europe then?"
    committee chairman Kasbar Karabetian told Reuters in an interview.

    "We have doubts that Turkey is determined to implement European reforms
    because a modern European nation first reconciles itself with its past.
    That is the true essence of a democratic European state," Karabetian said.

    The committee has organized rallies, speeches and exhibitions on April
    24 to mark the 90th anniversary of the deaths and draw attention to
    Turkey's EU bid. More protests are planned in September ahead of
    Ankara's accession talks.

    Turkey fears an outburst of anti-Turkish feeling that could damage to
    its EU bid. Ankara on Wednesday offered to open its archives and called
    on Armenia to do the same and back a new probe into the claims.

    Armenians have settled in Greece since the mid-18th century and enjoy
    close ties to Greeks. More than 1 million ethnic Greeks left Turkey
    together with many Armenians from 1922 in a population exchange
    following Greece's failed invasion of Turkey and the annual April 24
    Armenian commemorations are enshrined in Greek law.

    "The Greeks, who have had a similar fate with us, understand our plight
    better than anyone," Karabetian said. "We are very lucky in that sense."

    Karabetian said if Turkey joined the 25-nation bloc it would benefit
    both Greece, which has backed Ankara's EU bid, and Armenia, which has no
    diplomatic ties with Turkey. Turkey closed its border with Armenia in
    1993 in protest at Armenian occupation of part of Ankara's ally, Azerbaijan.

    "First we want Turkey to stop being the Turkey of today as we know it
    and become a Turkey with a true European mentality," Karabetian said.

    The European Parliament and France, home to Europe's largest Armenian
    community, have both urged Ankara to recognize the killings as genocide.
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