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  • ANKARA: Swiss Senate: Leave Armenian question to historians

    The New Anatolian
    Aug 8 2005

    Swiss Senate: Leave Armenian question to historians


    ANKARA - A Swiss House of Representative banning the rejection of the
    so-called Armenian genocide damaged relations between Turkey and
    Switzerland. Taking Turkish reactions into consideration, the Senate
    decides to leave the subject to experts.

    'The genocide claims will never be an issue for the Swiss Senate,'
    says Swiss foreign affairs committee President Briner. He says that
    other countries 'have no business pointing the finger at Turkey, 90
    years after the disputed events'

    The Swiss Senate will not debate or make any decision related to the
    Armenian genocide, said the president of the Senate foreign affairs
    committee, Peter Briner in a statement on Saturday, a move decidedly
    opposite to that of the Swiss House of Representatives who recognized
    the So-called genocide in 2003.

    The controversial events of the early 20th century between the
    dissolving Ottoman Empire and its Armenian minority "will never be an
    issue for the Swiss Senate," Briner was quoted as saying by
    Swissinfo.

    Briner said that other countries had no business pointing the finger
    at Turkey 90 years after the disputed events.

    Noting that the foreign affairs committee had decided that the death
    or deportation of Armenians between 1915 and 1919 would not be the
    subject of a plenary session, Briner said the committee agreed with
    the government that it was not Parliament's job to decide on the
    whether the events constituted genocide.

    The Armenians' claims have been recognized as truth by the
    parliaments of several countries, including Canada, France, Russia
    and Italy.

    Although Switzerland's House of Representatives recognized the
    so-called genocide a few years ago, the Swiss government however does
    not officially speak of "genocide" but rather of "mass deportations"
    and "massacres."

    Briner said that the committee believed that it was more important
    for the parties involved, namely Turkey and Armenia, to reach an
    agreement.

    Support for PM Erdogan's proposal

    Briner, backing the earlier proposal by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan, said that a mixed commission of historians should "work
    through the terrible events," just as Switzerland had reappraised its
    history during the World War II.

    Attempts by international scholars to determine once and for all what
    really happened between 1915 and 1919 have never got much further
    than agreeing on which two peoples were involved.

    In June, Alev Kilic, the Turkish ambassador in Bern, told Swissinfo
    that during Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey's visit to Turkey in
    March, her counterpart Abdullah Gul talked about establishing a
    commission of historians from both sides and opening all files and
    archives.

    "Of course the proposal was also made to the Armenian government, but
    we can't establish anything without their agreement," Kilic said. "We
    have still not received a positive reply."

    Genocide decision shadow over Turkish-Swiss relations

    The decision by the Swiss House of Representatives recognizing the
    so-called genocide greatly damaged relations between Turkey and
    Switzerland. Another of their decisions which bans the rejection of
    the so-called Armenian genocide only throws fuel on the fire.

    At the end of July, the Swiss ambassador in Ankara was forced to
    deflect a barrage of diplomatic flak concerning the Swiss
    investigation of a Turkish politician who had proffered revisionist
    views about the Armenian genocide in 1915.

    Last Friday Turkish authorities announced the indefinite postponement
    of a visit to Turkey by Swiss Finance Minister Joseph Deiss scheduled
    for September, citing agenda problems of his Turkish counterpart.

    During the First Woorld War years the Armenians rioted against the
    Istanbul Government in order to establish an Armenian State. The riot
    caused an ethnic conflict and more than 520,000 Turks were massacred
    by the Armenian armed groups while many Armenians were also killed or
    died due to the clashes and war circumstances.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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