Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: German Bundestag's Armenian Resolution Strains Turkey-German

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

  • ANKARA: German Bundestag's Armenian Resolution Strains Turkey-German

    German Bundestag's Armenian Resolution Strains Turkey-Germany Relations

    Journal of Turkish weekly
    June 17 2005

    BERLIN, JTW (Jan SOYKOK) - The German Bundestag parliament adopted a
    resolution on Thursday condemning the so-called massacre of up to 1.5
    million ethnic Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 90 years ago. Turkish
    experts find the timing strange. Turkish politicians similarly argued
    that the Germans took a resolution without any discussion. Turkish
    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan Straining relations with Turkey German
    Prime Minister Schroeder for not making anything to prevent the
    resolution. Turkey's foreign minister Abdullah Gul denounced the
    resolution as "irresponsible, appalling and injurious" to relations
    between the two countries.

    "IRRESPONSIBLE AND NARROW-MINDED"

    The Bundestag resolution criticized the current government of Turkey
    for "neglecting to address the issue" in a forthright manner.

    "We note this decision with regret and we strongly condemn it," said a
    statement released by Turkish foreign ministry. The statement accused
    the resolution of being rooted in "domestic politics" and called it
    "irresponsible and narrow-minded".

    Turkey acknowledges the tragedy of hundreds of thousands of deaths
    during 1915-17 but does not accept that there was a state-sponsored
    extermination plan. Turkish documents also prove that more than
    520,000 Turkish people were massacred by the Armenian armed groups
    during the Armenian riot. The Armenian nationalists aimed to set up an
    independent Armenian state in eastern provinces of the Ottoman Empire,
    yet they failed.

    Armenia argues that Turkey should no be accepted as full-member to
    the EU before it officially recognize the Armenian claims as truth.

    Some Europen politicians give support to the Armenians including
    German CDU leader Merkel. Thus the Armenian issue has complicated
    Turkey's efforts to join the European Union, though Armenia is not
    a EU member. Dr. Sedat Laciner from the Ankara-based think tank ISRO
    says "there is no link between Armenian issue and Turkey's EU bid.

    The Armenian issue has been used to prevent Turkey's EU membership
    by the anti-Turkish circles in the EU". According to Dr. Laciner,
    "Merkel or any other German politicians really care Armenians, they
    simple try to stop the Turks in".

    "German, French, Dutch and many other parliaments suddenly remembered
    the events happened almost a century ago. The 1915 Relocation Campaign
    strangely became one of the 'most vital' issue of EU's foreign
    relations. On the other hand 20 percent of Azerbaijan has been under
    Armenian occupation, no German or French MP remembers it.

    More than 1 million Azerbaijanis have been refugees and no human rights
    organizations in Europe makes any help to them. The only problem is
    the events happened a century ago. The French MPs refuse to accept the
    Algerian Genocide, though the Algerian President urged France has to
    accept the genocide. The French President says the 'Armenian genocide'
    issue should be left to the historians. However the French Parliament
    and the President himself do not leave the historical problems between
    Turkey and Armenians to the historians. I do not find the EU leaders
    sincere in Armenian issue"

    The Armenians rioted during the First World War and attacked Turkish
    and Kurdish villages. Hundreds of thousands of Muslims were massacred
    and many more were forced to emigrate to the Western provinces of
    the Ottoman State. The Armenian bandits further attacked the Ottoman
    troops from the back when they involved hot clashes against the
    Russian occupying troops. Therefore, the Istanbul Government decided to
    relocate the Armenians from Eastern provinces to the southern provinces
    of the State Starvation, disease, attacks by Kurdish bandits resulted
    in mass fatalities. According to the official documents more than
    100,000 Armenians died in this campaign. The Armenian politicians
    argue the figure is more than 1 million (some says 1,5, some other
    Armenians argue the figure is 2,5 million). The figure is debatable
    and the Armenian historians never use an archive document to prove
    their arguments.

    TURKEY CONDEMNS THE GERMAN PARLIAMENT

    Turkey has strongly condemned approval of the resolution by the
    German parliament.

    Releasing a statement, the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA)
    said "The German parliament adopted a resolution about the events
    of 1915. We regret and strongly condemn it. Turkey explained its
    views to German authorities on numerous occasions. We pointed out
    to unilateral content of the decision, serious mistakes in the text,
    and lack of information. We stressed that approval of such a decision
    by Germany which we always considered one of our friendly and allied
    countries, will play havoc with our relations."

    "However, we regret to see that the German government did not take
    into consideration all our warnings. It is evident that the initiative
    stemmed from domestic political purposes. Use of such a sensitive
    issue for political purposes is nothing but irresponsibility and
    narrow-mindedness. The decision includes totally baseless allegations
    that almost all Armenians in Anatolia were destroyed. The decision
    recommending the German government to include 'relocation and
    destruction of Armenians' in state education policies, includes
    extremely dangerous and provocative proposals that could led enmity
    among German young people against Turks."

    "Turkey advocates that historical events should be discussed by
    historians and scientists instead of politicians and parliaments.

    Therefore, we have opened our archives to all researchers including
    Germans and Armenians. Also, Turkey proposed Armenia to set up a
    joint commission to examine Turkish-Armenian relations during the
    era of the Ottoman Empire."

    "Turkey is in reconciliation with its past. Turkey does not need
    decisions of foreign parliaments to deal with any part of its
    history. If the German parliaments needs to reconcile with its own
    history, it should handle it under its own historical responsibilities
    instead of putting forward such baseless allegations against Turkey".

    Earlier in the day, the German parliament unanimously adopted a
    resolution envisaging commemoration of so-called Armenian genocide.

    The resolution was brought onto the parliamentary agenda by
    [opposition] CDU/CSU (Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social
    Union).

    GERMANS LOOK FOR A FRIEND IN GENOCIDE

    Dr. Davut Sahiner on the other hand accuses the German MPs of looking
    for a partner in genocide. Sahiner said "Germans do not want to be
    the only nation who committed genocide":

    "Germans know that the Ottoman Empire did not commit genocide against
    any nation. Turks and Germans were allies during the First World War.

    When the Armenians attacked the Ottoman troops during the
    Ottoman-Russian Conflicts, the Germans urged the Ottomans to relocate
    or to destroy the Armenians. However the Turkish statesmen refused
    to implement the German plans and decided resettle the Eastern
    Armenians to the southern provinces. They did not touch the Armenians
    of Istanbul and those in Western provinces. During the same conflicts
    the Russians destroyed or forced to immigration thousands of Muslims
    in the Caucasus. More than half million of Muslims were massacred
    by the Armenians. Even the Russians were horrified by the Armenian
    massacres. Not only during the First World War, even after the War the
    Armenians massacred more Muslims with the occupying French troops till
    the Turkish victory. When Turkey established independent Republic of
    Turkey, Mustafa Kemal called the Armenian to return their homes in
    Anatolia. Yet most of them had immigrated to the Western Europe and
    the Northern America. And very little returned.

    Nevertheless about 100,000 Armenians still live in Istanbul and in
    other Turkish cities. More than 50,000 Armenians from Armenia also
    work in Istanbul."
Working...
X