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Armenian genocide row as Germany confronts Auschwitz

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  • Armenian genocide row as Germany confronts Auschwitz

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    February 8, 2005, Tuesday


    NEWS FEATURE: Armenian genocide row as Germany confronts Auschwitz

    By Leon Mangasarian, dpa

    Berlin


    A row has erupted in Germany over alleged pressure by a Turkish
    diplomat which caused removal of the Armenian genocide from school
    curriculums just as Germany held high profile ceremonies marking the
    Auschwitz death camp liberation anniversary last month. It all began
    when Turkey's Consul in Berlin, Aydin Durusay, raised the issue of
    the 1915 Armenian massacres with leaders of Brandenburg - the only
    one of Germany's 16 federal states, which described the killings as
    "genocide" in its school curriculum. Most European and U.S.
    historians say up to 1.5 million Christian Armenians were killed by
    Moslem Ottoman Turks during World War I and that this was a genocide.
    Eight European Union (E.U.) parliaments including France and the
    Netherlands - but not Germany - have passed resolutions declaring the
    deaths genocide. Turkey, however, firmly rejects the genocide label
    and has long insisted far fewer Armenians died or otherwise succumbed
    during World War I. More recently it has moderated its tone somewhat
    and said the matter should be cleared up by a historical commission.
    Over lunch at Potsdam's exclusive "Villa von Haacke" restaurant,
    Brandenburg's Prime Minister Matthias Platzeck and his education
    minister swiftly agreed to Durusay's request to eliminate references
    on Armenians in history classes, said news magazine Der Spiegel.
    "Naturally the whole thing came out and just in the week the
    liberation of Auschwitz was being commemorated - Platzeck and his
    education minister disgraced themselves," said the Frankfurter
    Allgemeine, Germany's conservative paper of record. Education
    Minister Holger Rupprecht, however, defended the decision.
    Brandenburg officials say a reworked curriculum will list a series of
    genocides as examples. "Mention (of the genocide) was taken out
    because both the premier and myself regarded it as a mistake to only
    name the Armenians as a single example for such an explosive theme as
    genocide. Turkey naturally reacted allergically," said Rupprecht in a
    Potsdamer Neueste Nachrichten newspaper interview. But the
    controversy swiftly took on an international angle with the angry
    Armenian Ambassdor to Germany, Karine Kazinian, due to meet with
    Platzeck later this week. A German Foreign Ministry spokeswoman,
    Sabine Stoehr, declined to comment directly on the affair or on
    whether the German government agreed that the 1915 killings of
    Armenians amounted to a genocide. "Our view is that coming to terms
    with the past is naturally very important but it's an issue between
    Armenia and Turkey," said Stoehr. German Foreign Minister Joschka
    Fischer visited Armenia last year and made a stop at Yerevan's
    genocide memorial. Stoehr said his only official comment at the
    memorial had been: "Reconciliation is the basis for a common future."
    A Turkish embassy spokesman in Berlin would not comment on the
    discord in Brandeburg other than to stress the initiative came from
    the Turkish consulate for the region - not from the embassy itself.
    The man at the centre of the dispute, Brandenburg's Prime Minister
    Platzeck, is a member of German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's Social
    Democrats (SPD). Schroeder is a top supporter of Turkey's bid to join
    the European Union. Any issue which impacts on Turkey is tricky for
    Berlin given that Germany has almost two million resident Turks who
    comprise by far the country's biggest minority. Many Turks in Germany
    are poorly integrated and unemployment rates for Turkish youths are
    high. And there is another angle: Germany's own historic link to the
    killing of the Armenians. As Huberta von Voss, the editor of a new
    book on Armenian history and contemporary affairs notes: Germany has
    "moral responsibility" for the Armenian genocide because Berlin was
    allied with the Ottoman Turks during the First World War. "Many
    German politicians are absorbed with the Holocaust ... they don't
    have the strength for another genocide," said von Voss in an
    interview. Wolfgang Gust, a former correspondent for the news
    magazine Der Spiegel, says in a chapter of the book titled "Partners
    in Silence" that "German officers played an important role in the war
    of destruction against the Armenians." The involvement of Germans
    ranged from diplomats failing to protest the massacres, to officers
    taking part in executions of Armenians and the mass expulsion of
    women and children who died in the Syrian desert, says Gust who is
    compiling an archive of German Foreign Ministry documents on the
    genocide available at www.armenocide.net Von Voss's book dismisses
    Turkish arguments that the killing of Armenians did not amount to
    genocide. "The research has already been done. We do not even need
    the Ottoman archives to be opened - the evidence is overwhelming,"
    she said, adding: "Don't pretend the Armenian genocide is a matter of
    opinion. It's a fact." With Turkey gearing up to start negotiations
    in October aimed at E.U. membership, von Voss warned that failure to
    address the Armenian genocide could severely harm Ankara's chances.
    The parliament of the Netherlands, which only passed its Armenia
    genocide resolution last December, did so in part due to anger that
    the issue was left out of the formal E.U. decision to open accession
    talks with Ankara, she noted. Turkey is not expected to join the E.U.
    for 10 to 15 years and will only be able to do so if all 25 current
    member states give it a green light. dpa lm ms
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