Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Warsaw: Nothing anti-Turkish in Sejm resolution - Cimoszewicz

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

  • Warsaw: Nothing anti-Turkish in Sejm resolution - Cimoszewicz

    Polish Press Agency
    PAP News Wire
    April 21, 2005 Thursday

    Nothing anti-Turkish in Sejm resolution - Cimoszewicz

    Warsaw, April 21

    The Sejm resolution marking the 90th anniversary of genocide on Turkish
    Armenians has no anti-Turkish bias; Turkey still finds it difficult
    to reconcile with historical truth, but we considered paying homage
    to the victims an obvious thing - is how Sejm speaker Wlodzimierz
    Cimoszewicz reacted Thursday to Turkish official protest of Wednesday.

    The Turkish foreign ministry on Wednesday criticised Tuesday's
    resolution by the Polish Sejm condemning and recognising as genocide
    the mass killing of Armenians during World War I.

    The Turkish side accused Polish politicians of being
    "irresponsible." The Turkish foreign ministry said that Turkey strongly
    condemned the Polish Parliament's resolution and warned deputies to
    avoid "initiatives that could provoke vengeance and hatred between
    nations."

    Cimoszewicz said Thursday that the MPs adopted the resolution knowing
    full well that "Turkish authorities continue to refuse admitting
    Turkey's responsibility for the extermination of Armenians in 1915."

    "I understand that such admittance is politically and psychologically
    hard for the Turks, even though the events took place three generations
    ago," Cimoszewicz went on.

    "The Turkish foreign ministry is in the wrong and I do not accept
    its criticisms," the Sejm speaker said flatly.

    He added that it was in the interests of Turkey and Poland to avoid
    a dispute or conflict over this historical issue. "It would make no
    sense," Cimoszewicz argued, adding that the adoption of the resolution
    was not anti-Turkish in the least.

    The Sejm speaker noted that the Poles remembered well Turkey's
    approach to the Polish cause when Poland had been partitioned. Now
    Poland was among the most fervent supporters of talks with Turkey on
    its EU admission, Cimoszewicz remarked.

    "The Turkish foreign ministry did what it considered politically
    indispensable but I do hope that a few days from now the problem
    between us will disappear," the speaker declared.
Working...
X