Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

German CDU to Demand Turkey Acknowledge Killings of Armenians

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • German CDU to Demand Turkey Acknowledge Killings of Armenians

    Bloomberg
    Feb 24 2005

    German CDU to Demand Turkey Acknowledge Killings of Armenians

    Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Germany's main opposition parties, which
    oppose Turkey's bid to join the European Union, plan to submit a
    motion to parliament calling on Turkey to acknowledge responsibility
    for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Armenians in 1915.

    The Christian Democratic Union and its Bavarian sister party, the
    Christian Social Union, said the Turkish government arrested the
    Armenian political elite in Istanbul in 1915, marking the start of
    mass deportations and murders in which as many as 1.5 million
    Armenians are estimated to have died.

    The Turkish government's refusal to accept responsibility for the
    crimes committed 90 years ago ``stands in contrast to the idea of
    reconciliation that spearheads the shared values of the European
    Union, which Turkey aims to join,'' said the draft motion, a copy of
    which was e-mailed to Bloomberg News.

    CDU leader Angela Merkel and CSU head Edmund Stoiber have called for
    Turkey to be allowed a ``privileged partnership'' with the 25-nation
    bloc. EU leaders including German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder agreed
    two months ago that Turkey should start membership talks in October
    this year.

    Turkey's Hurriyet newspaper today called the motion an attempt by
    Merkel to block the country from joining the EU. The CDU leader has
    said Turkey isn't European enough in terms of its culture and history
    to join the union.

    ``It isn't true that we want to bar Turkey from EU entry with this
    proposal, but still we think it's important to honor the memory of
    the Armenian victims,'' the CDU's Christoph Bergner, one of the
    legislators who signed the motion, said in a telephone interview.

    Germany has a part in the crimes because the government at the time
    didn't act to prevent the killings in spite of detailed evidence
    documented by German ambassadors in Turkey, Bergner said.

    Not all CDU lawmakers back the motion.

    ``I reject this proposal and didn't vote for it,'' said Volker Ruehe,
    the chairman of the all-party parliamentary foreign- affairs
    committee, in an interview. ``I think it will be modified eventually.
    We've no right to thrust this demand'' on Turkey.

    The Turkish government denies accusations of genocide over the
    deaths. It says the Armenians were killed during civil conflicts in
    which many Turks also died.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000100&sid=aQUvaAIvGS4w&refer=g ermany
Working...
X