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Armenians look to Bush to step up pressure on Turkey over genocide

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  • Armenians look to Bush to step up pressure on Turkey over genocide

    Armenians look to Bush to step up pressure on Turkey over 1915 'genocide'

    The Guardian - United Kingdom
    Apr 23, 2005

    HELENA SMITH IN ATHENS


    International pressure on Turkey to recognise the 1915 massacre of
    more than one million Armenians as genocide is mounting on the eve of
    the 90th anniversary of the start of the killings.

    As Armenians worldwide prepare to commemorate the murders tomorrow -
    amid hopes that the US president, George Bush, will use the term
    genocide for the first time to describe the massacres - Ankara faced
    growing calls to own up to the slaughter.

    Armenia's foreign minister, Vardan Oskanyan, said, "Without
    recognition of the fact of genocide and an admission that it was
    wrong, we cannot trust our neighbour, which has a tangible military
    weight."

    Up to 1.5m Armenians may have died as part of a plot hatched by
    Ottoman Turks to ethnically cleanse the region during the first world
    war.

    Turkish officials deny the allegations. Although they admit several
    hundred thousand people died, they claim that most deaths were as a
    result of hunger and disease when they were deported to Syria.

    An American diplomat at the time reported seeing Ottoman soldiers and
    Kurdish tribesmen "sweeping the countryside, massacring men, women and
    children and burning their homes. Babies were shot in their mothers'
    arms, small children were horribly mutilated, women were stripped and
    beaten."

    The calls on Ankara to face up to its past have cast a shadow over the
    country's efforts to join the EU. Increasing numbers of European
    politicians are demanding that Turkey accept that almost its entire
    Christian Armenian community died.

    Speculation has been rife in the Turkish press that Mr Bush will
    tomorrow cave in to pressure from US Armenian groups and endorse the
    description of genocide in his annual statement condemning the
    massacres. Yesterday, President Jacques Chirac laid a wreath at a
    monument in Paris built to commemorate the victims.

    Analysts say the issue has played a major role in the waning of
    popular support for EU membership among Turks. Last month more than
    80% of Turks canvassed for a poll published in Turkey's Milliyet
    newspaper said Ankara should not seek EU membership if it has to
    recognise the genocide claims.

    The prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, recently urged a commission
    of historians to be formed to establish whether genocide occurred.

    "It is wrong and unjust for our European friends to press Turkey on
    these issues," said President Ahmet Necdet Sezer. "These claims upset
    and hurt the feelings of the Turkish nation. What needs to be done is
    research and investigate and discuss history, based on documents and
    without prejudice."

    Turkey's increasingly vocal nationalists counter that Europeans
    deliberately support Armenians, Kurds and other minorities with a view
    to ultimately dismembering Turkey.

    The novelist Orhan Pamuk received death threats this year after he
    declared that "one million Armenians and 30,000 Kurds were killed in
    Turkey".

    "The Armenian issue is a black spot on our subconscious," said Dogu
    Ergil, a political sociologist at Ankara University. "This is a
    poisonous issue which will sour public opinion in Turkey and interfere
    with the enthusiasm of people here to be a part of Europe."
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