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Aegis Trust Calls for UK Government to recognise Armenian Genocide

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  • Aegis Trust Calls for UK Government to recognise Armenian Genocide

    PRESS RELEASE
    The Aegis Trust
    Lound Hall, Bothamsall
    Retford, NOTTS, DN22 8DF UK
    Contact: David Brown
    Tell: +44 (0)1623 836627
    Email: [email protected]

    Call for UK Government to recognise Armenian Genocide - 90 years on

    23 April 2005

    The Aegis Trust today sent a letter to the Prime Minister Tony Blair
    and Foreign Secretary Jack Straw calling on the Government to
    recognise the Armenian Genocide and encourage Turkey to do likewise.

    The letter has been sent to coincide with worldwide commemorations
    this weekend marking the 90th anniversary of the start of the
    genocide on 24 April 1915, in which Turkey wiped out its Armenian
    population.

    Turkey, a candidate country to the European Union, strongly
    maintains a policy of denial regarding the Armenian Genocide, a
    policy condemned by ten EU states.

    Most recently, Germany went a step further on Thursday (21 April) by
    stating "partly through approval and through failure to take
    effective preventive measures there was a German co-responsibility
    for this genocide" (Gernot Erler, the Social Democratic (SPD)
    Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister).

    "We understand that Turkey is an important ally within NATO. However,
    the time is long overdue for the British Government to encourage
    Turkey to come to terms with its past, and to join other European
    states in giving the Armenian Genocide the recognition it deserves,'
    states James Smith, Chief Executive of the Aegis Trust. `We should
    do so both out of respect for the victims and survivors, and for the
    sake of the future. We have to recognise the reality of history in
    order to learn from it - and unless we learn from it, we are doomed
    to repeat its mistakes.'

    END
    ___________________________

    Letter to Tony Blair and Jack Straw, 23rd April 2005

    Re: 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

    On Thursday this week, Gernot Erler, the Social Democratic (SPD)
    Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister, with the support of opposition
    parties, took the unprecedented and historic step of accepting that
    "partly through approval and through failure to take effective
    preventive measures there was a German co-responsibility for this
    [the Armenian] genocide".

    On 19 April 2005, Poland became the 9th European Union State to
    recognise the Armenian Genocide, following resolutions in Cyprus,
    Greece, Belgium, Sweden, Italy, France, Slovakia and the Netherlands.
    This is alongside numerous resolutions passed since 1987 by the
    European Parliament. This recognition of history contrasts
    unfortunately from the British Government's policy on the events of
    1915-18.

    April 24th 2005 marks the 90th anniversary of this tragedy. It was
    on that night in 1915 that the first wave of intellectuals, political
    leaders, clergymen, teachers, poets and artists were rounded up by the
    Ottoman Government of Turkey, to be dispatched to the Turkish interior
    and ultimately to their deaths. This fate was shared during the rest
    of 1915 and 1916 by over a million men women and children because of
    their race.

    Since 1965, no UK government has been willing to recognise the
    genocidal intent of the Armenian massacres. It has been the policy to
    place greater value upon a strategic relationship with one of our NATO
    allies.

    Instead of asking Turkey - as Germany has done with the Holocaust and
    Armenian Genocide - to seek an honest retrospection, we have remained
    silent regarding the suppression of free expression on this subject in
    Turkey. We have remained silent over the arrest of teachers for
    questioning policies that require all schoolchildren in Turkey to
    prepare essays that deny the Armenian genocide. We have remained
    silent on clauses within the new Turkish Penal Code that identify
    affirmation of the Armenian genocide as a crime against the state.
    We have remained silent over the Turkish Government's indifference to
    death threats against writers and historians that articulate an
    opposing view within Turkey.

    Rather, it has been this Government's view that in the case of the
    Armenians, "the past is best dealt with by ceasing to rake it up
    incessantly" (Foreign Office Minister Dennis MacShane, 12 October
    2004).

    For the children of survivors, this is about truth and recognition
    that should have happened decades ago, not about raking up history.
    We should be mindful that the fate of the Armenians helped to shape
    the UN Genocide Convention. The only way to protect people in the
    future is to learn from the past.

    The Turkish Government has been listening carefully to our official
    indifference. So much so that it has this week sent a letter to all
    members of the British Parliament, calling on you to debunk our own
    historical and diplomatic record of the genocide which describes the
    "race extermination" that was taking place.

    It is disappointing, and increasingly troubling, that in spite of
    many European and non-European countries heeding calls from genocide
    and holocaust scholars that governments should recognise the Armenian
    Genocide, the British Government is willing to adopt a policy that
    actually emboldens Turkey's policy of suppression and revision.

    Your Government has done much to be proud of in the field of genocide
    prevention and human rights, having been amongst the original
    signatories to the Stockholm Declaration on the Holocaust in 2000,
    initiating the UK's national Holocaust Memorial Day in 2001, and
    signing the Stockholm Declaration of 2004 on genocide prevention.
    Your appeasement of Turkish denial of the Armenian Genocide is a sad
    blemish on this record.

    Germany has the largest European Turkish population, and also has
    strong ties with the Government of Turkey, including support for its
    candidature to the European Union. Yet as a friend and ally it feels
    that Turkey should end its state sponsored genocide denial and oppressive
    policies in relation to free speech on the Armenian Genocide.

    The German Government has also gone further and become the first
    government to accept responsibility for the Genocide as a WWI ally to the
    Ottoman Empire, apologising to the Armenian people - something that they
    have waited two generations to see. How long will they have to wait for
    a British Government to affirm its own historical record and recognise
    the reality of the genocide they experienced?

    Yours sincerely,

    Dr James Smith, Chief Executive
    Director, Aegis Trust
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