Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish denial expert Halacoglu seeks Armenian Genocide `probe'

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

  • Turkish denial expert Halacoglu seeks Armenian Genocide `probe'

    Turkish denial expert Halacoglu seeks Armenian Genocide `probe'

    Reuters
    January 12, 2005

    By Gareth Jones ([email protected])

    ANKARA, Jan 12 (Reuters) - As Armenians prepare to mark the 90th
    anniversary of the alleged "genocide" of their people by Ottoman Turkish
    forces, a leading Turkish historian has called for a multi-national inquiry
    into what really happened.

    Armenia says 1.5 million of its people died between 1915 and 1923 on
    Ottoman territory in a systematic genocide and says the decision to
    carry it
    out was taken by the political party then in power in Istanbul, popularly
    known as the Young Turks.

    Turkey denies genocide, saying the Armenians were victims of a partisan
    war during World War One which also claimed many Muslim Turkish lives.
    Turkey accuses Armenians of carrying out massacres while siding with
    invading Russian troops.

    "I think we historians, Turkish, American, French, British and Armenian,
    must come together and form a commission to investigate this issue
    objectively," Yusuf Halacoglu, head of the Turkish Historical Society, told
    Reuters on Wednesday.

    Halacoglu, who endorses the mainstream Turkish view of the events and
    rejects the genocide claims, said setting scholars to work together was all
    the more important for his country because the "genocide" issue threatened
    to complicate Turkey's entry talks with the European Union.

    The European Parliament and France, home to Europe's largest Armenian
    community, have both urged Turkey to recognise the killings of Armenians
    between 1915 and 1923 as genocide. Armenians this year mark the 90th
    anniversary of the events on April 24 and Turkey is to start EU entry talks
    on Oct. 3, 2005.

    Halacoglu said the commission would ideally work under the auspices of
    the United Nations or another international body to help ensure
    impartiality
    and to encourage all states concerned to open up their archives to the
    panel.

    He was due to discuss his research on the period on Wednesday with
    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul and said he hoped for official Turkish
    backing
    for a commission.

    TURKEY "PASSIVE"

    Halacoglu said Turkey had been too "passive" in the past, allowing
    Armenian nationalists, especially in the well-organised diaspora in North
    America and Europe, to dominate the debate.

    As a result, parliaments in many countries from Canada to Switzerland had
    approved resolutions recognising the "genocide" as fact, despite a lack of
    documented evidence, he said.

    Halacoglu said he and other Turkish historians had conducted detailed
    work on the period in question over the last three years through access to
    national archives in Britain, France, the United States, Russia and
    Austria.

    "We wanted to establish what really happened and the conclusion we
    reached is that there had been no genocide. The Armenians suffered terrible
    losses but equally some 500,000 to 600,000 Muslims (Turks, Kurds, Arabs)
    were killed," he said.

    He put the number of Armenians who perished during that period at around
    300,000 and said the main cause of death was disease, also a major killer
    among the armies of the period.

    As evidence that the Ottoman authorities were not bent on the destruction
    of an entire people, as Nazi Germany was against the Jews, Halacoglu cited
    the fact that Armenians in Istanbul and western Turkey were largely
    untouched by the violence.

    He also quoted documents showing that Ottoman authorities allowed some
    Armenians to remain in those cities and towns affected by population
    transfers and that many others were allowed to return after World War One
    ended.

    (Editing by Charles Dick; Reuters Messaging:
    [email protected]; Ankara newsroom, +90 312 292 7012)
Working...
X