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Armenia conditionally backs genocide probe idea

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  • Armenia conditionally backs genocide probe idea

    Reuters Alert, UK
    April 26 2005

    Armenia conditionally backs genocide probe idea
    26 Apr 2005 18:22:05 GMT

    Source: Reuters

    YEREVAN, April 26 (Reuters) - The president of ex-Soviet Armenia on
    Tuesday conditionally backed a Turkish proposal to set up a joint
    commission to investigate claims of mass genocide of Armenians 90
    years ago.

    Robert Kocharyan said the proposal would work only if better
    relations were first established between Turkey and his country of
    3.2 million lying on its eastern border.

    The neighbours share a border but no diplomatic ties.

    Armenia wants Ankara to recognise as genocide the killing of 1.5
    million Armenians between 1915 and 1923. Armenians say their kin were
    systematically exterminated by Ottoman Turkey's rulers during and
    soon after World War One.

    Ankara says there was no plan to wipe out Armenians and that they
    were victims of a war, not genocide.

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has suggested opening up the
    countries' state archives for experts from both countries to resolve
    the issue, which is casting a shadow over Ankara's ambitions to join
    the European Union.

    "We have proposed and continue to propose establishing, without any
    preconditions, normal relations between our countries," Kocharyan
    wrote in reply to the Turkish plan.

    "It is precisely in this context that an inter-governmental
    commission can be created to discuss any single question between our
    two countries or all questions with the goal of solving them and
    achieving joint understanding."

    Turkey shut its border with Armenia in 1993 and cut diplomatic ties
    in solidarity with Azerbaijan which was fighting a war with the
    Armenians over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Kocharyan added: "Your proposal to address the past cannot be
    effective if it doesn't relate to the present and future."

    Turkey's Oct. 3 start date for talks on EU membership has put the
    dispute firmly on the political agenda. France, home to an
    influential 400,000-strong Armenian community, has promised to seek a
    Turkish admission of genocide.

    Erdogan, addressing an Istanbul conference, repeated his criticism of
    politicians in Europe and North America who backed the Armenian
    demands, saying their stance would "stoke resentment and hatred, not
    be a basis for peace in the world".

    "If we have to face up to our history, we will do so. But other
    countries must also face up to the same history," he said.
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