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ANKARA: 'German MPs Look For Friends in Genocide'

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  • ANKARA: 'German MPs Look For Friends in Genocide'

    Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
    April 22 2005

    'German MPs Look For Friends in Genocide'
    GERMAN MPs DISCUSS ARMENIAN ISSUE

    Jan SOYKOK (JTW) German MPs from across the political spectrum
    discussed the Armenian issue and Turkish-Armenian relations. Turkish
    Armenian researchers argue the decision has no link with the Armenian
    issue but a German strategy.

    Armenia says more than 1 million of its people were slaughtered
    between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor of
    modern Turkey, was falling apart. Turkey does not accept the
    allegations and says about 523,000 Turkish people were massacred by
    the Armenian armed groups and most of the Armenians died due to the
    communal ethnic conflicts, famine, epidemic diseases and war
    circumstances. According to Turkish historians the number of
    Armenians killed is about 100,000. Most of the Ottoman Armenians
    joined the Russian Army against the Ottoman Armies during the First
    World War in order to establish a separate Armenian State though they
    were no majority in any Ottoman city. When Armenian rioted the
    Istanbul Government decided to relocate the Armenians near the war
    theatre to another Ottoman province (Syria). Germany was Ottoman
    Turkey's main ally in the First World War, and it is argued that
    German Government advised Turks to relocate the Armenians.

    "TURKEY SHOULD FACE UP THE TRUTH"

    During an often impassioned debate in the German Bundestag lower
    house of parliament, Friedbert Pflueger, the foreign affairs
    specialist for the opposition Christian Democratic Union (CDU), said:
    "Turkey should face up to the truth." However he said putting
    pressure on Turkey would not lead to Ankara recognizing what had
    happened. "We do not want to incriminate and we do not want to
    embellish," CDU M.P. Pflueger added.

    Another member of the opposition Christian Democratic alliance
    (CDU/CSU), Erwin Marschewski, said in a statement that the value
    system of the European Union insisted that countries "shine a
    spotlight on the dark pages of their history." "Recognition by Turkey
    of the Armenian genocide of 1915 and 1916 is important," said
    Marschewski.

    Fritz Kuhn of the Greens, which form the governing coalition with
    Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's Social Democrats, said the debate had
    taken on increased importance because "we want Turkey to be an EU
    member one day".
    Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder is a staunch backer of Turkish EU
    membership and will visit Ankara and Istanbul for talks with Turkish
    political and business leaders on 3 and 4 May.

    "GERMANY PLAYS A DIRTY GAME"

    According to Dr. Nilgun Gulcan from Ankara-based think tank
    USAK-ISRO, "Germany plays a dirty game":

    "Germany has been the only state which committed genocide during the
    Second World War. The Germans slaughtered more than 5 million Jews in
    Holocaust. This should be a terrible shame on Germans. Germany has
    made great efforts to create similar cases to the Nazi regime's
    genocide. Thus some in Germany welcomes all genocide claims. They
    want friends in genocide. So nobody would accuse the Germans as the
    only genocide-makers" added Gulcan.

    Davut Sahiner sees the issue as a step to prevent Turkey's EU
    membership and a CDU plan:

    "I think the CDU is the main player behind the debates in German
    Parliament. German Government gives a great support to Turkey's EU
    membership and the CDU does not want to see Turkey in. They did
    anything possible to prevent Turkey's EU bid. They tried anything,
    but Armenian issue. This is the latest part of the game. The CDU's
    another aim is to make hostile Turkish voters and governing German
    parties. Turkish voters enthusiastically supports Schroeder. If
    German Governments contradict with the Turkish view in Armenian
    issue, the it will undermine the Government."

    "FULL OF FACTUAL ERRORS IN BUNDESTAG RESOLUTION"

    Turkey's ambassador to Germany, Mehmet Ali Irtemcelik, has denounced
    the planned Bundestag resolution as containing "countless factual
    errors" and being written "in agreement with propaganda efforts of
    fanatic Armenians": "Its goal is to defame Turkish history... and
    poison ties between Turkey and the European Union," said the
    ambassador.

    "NO DOCUMENTS, BUT GENOCIDE ALLEGATIONS"

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan last week called the Armenian
    side to establish a joint commission to discuss the historical
    disputes. However the Armenian Government rejected the offer two
    times. Armenian Foreign Minister Oskanian said "there is nothing to
    debate". Turkish Government also declared that all Turkish-Ottoman
    archives are open to all researchers including the Armenians. The
    Turkish officials further said "the Armenian, particularly the Tahnak
    archives must be opened to historians as well".

    According to Yusuf Halacoglu, Head of Turkish History Society,
    Armenians cannot provide any documents to prove their allegations.
    Similarly Dr. Sedat Laciner, Director of ISRO, says "There are
    abundant of documents which prove that there was no genocide or a
    state-organized massacres in 1915. We understand more than 523,000
    Turkish people were killed by the Armenian militants. All in Turkey
    accept the Armenian tragedy. However the Armenians should also see
    the Turkish tragedy". According to Laciner Armenians should bring
    their archive documents and discuss the matter with the Turks instead
    of blackmailing Turkey in a very sensitive period (Turkey-EU
    negotiations).

    "Armenia should see that it will benefit a lot from an
    EU-member-Turkey. Turkey could help Armenia to become wealthier and
    more democratic. Turkey could be a way for Armenia to be integrated
    with the West and the world. However Armenian politics has been
    dominated by anti-Turkish-obsessed diaspora. The diaspora cannot
    understand Armenia's needs. They are really egoist and they just talk
    about the past. Turkey and Armenia cannot establish their relations
    on the historical debates but on today's realities."

    OTTOMANS EXECUTED 63 PEOPLE FOR HARMING ARMENIANS

    Nilgun Gulcan says the Ottoman Government took all the necessary
    measures to protect the Armenian civilians during the Relocation
    Campaign. The Ottoman government executed 63 people for attacking and
    harming Armenians during the relocation days, according to a research
    carried out within Turkish Prime Ministry State Archives.

    Turkey is set to start EU accession talks on October 3.

    JTW
    22 April 2005
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