Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenians' national anguish stalks Turkey EU bid

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

  • Armenians' national anguish stalks Turkey EU bid

    Reuters, UK
    April 21 2005

    Armenians' national anguish stalks Turkey EU bid
    21 Apr 2005 09:23:41 GMT

    Source: Reuters

    By Hasmik Mkrtchian

    YEREVAN, April 21 (Reuters) - Armenians will throng through their
    capital this Sunday to commemorate what they say is Turkey's genocide
    of 1.5 million of their people and which 90 years on is casting a
    shadow over Ankara's European ambitions.

    Armenians say their kin were systematically exterminated by Ottoman
    Turkey's rulers during and soon after World War One and that modern
    Turkey ought to recognise that as a genocide. Ankara refuses, saying
    there was no plan to wipe out Armenians.

    It is an old debate but the Oct. 3 date for the start of Turkey's
    talks on entry to the European Union has put the issue -- and this
    tiny ex-Soviet republic on Turkey's eastern border -- onto the European
    political map.

    "I have no doubt the question of genocide will be on the agenda for
    the talks between the EU and Turkey," said Armenian Foreign Minister
    Vardan Oskanyan.

    "We, of course, would like the EU to put (recognition) forward as
    a condition," said Oskanyan, who grew up in Syria after his family
    fled their home in southern Turkey.

    The problem for Ankara is that some European politicians -- notably
    in France, home to an influential, 400,000-strong Armenian emigre
    community -- agree with him.

    NATIONAL SECURITY

    A Christian nation of 3.2 million people almost encircled by hostile
    neighbours, Armenia says persuading Turkey to own up to genocide is
    an issue of national security.

    "Without recognition of the fact of genocide and an admission (from
    Turkey) that it was wrong, we cannot trust our neighbour, which has
    a tangible military weight," said Oskanyan.

    Armenia nervously eyes its neighbour -- home to the biggest army in
    NATO after the United States -- across a 355-km (220-mile) frontier
    that zigzags through the snow-topped Caucasus mountains.

    The two countries have no diplomatic relations and Turkey shut the
    border in 1993 out of solidarity with Turkish-speaking ally Azerbaijan,
    which was then fighting a territorial war with Armenia.

    Meanwhile, the simmering conflict with Azerbaijan fuels suspicion
    of Turkey. Ankara helps train Azeri troops, which still exchange
    occasional potshots with Armenian forces across a tense cease-fire
    line.

    But security aside, Armenians see the events of 90 years ago as a
    national tragedy that they want the world -- and Turkey in particular
    -- to acknowledge.

    Armenia, supported by many Western historians, says between 1915
    and 1923 up to 1.5 million Armenians were either killed or died from
    disease and starvation as an intended result of forced relocations
    implemented by Turkey's nationalist government.

    Most Turkish historians say Armenian nationalists sided with Russian
    troops when they invaded eastern Turkey. Many died, Turkey says,
    but they were the victims of a war, not genocide.

    Organisers of this Sunday's anniversary in Yerevan say 1.5 million
    people -- representing the number Armenians say died -- will converge
    on a memorial to the victims, a granite obelisk on a hill overlooking
    the city.

    Marianna Yeremyants, a 50-year-old Yerevan resident, said she would
    be joining the procession.

    "When he was defending his plans (to exterminate the Jews) Hitler said:
    'Who remembers the Armenian victims?'" said Yeremyants.

    "Maybe, if the Armenian genocide had been condemned right away,
    there would not have been a Holocaust," she said.

    (Additional reporting by Gareth Jones in Ankara and Timothy Heritage
    in Paris)
Working...
X