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  • Turkey rapped over massacres

    Turkey rapped over massacres: German parliamentary motion critical of refusal to recognize killing of Armenians
    By Friederike Peters

    Windsor Star (Ontario)
    June 17, 2005 Friday
    Final Edition

    Germany's lower house of parliament Thursday approved a motion
    criticizing Turkey for failing to recognize that the Turkish Ottoman
    Empire was involved in the massacres of hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians in 1915.

    The extent of the massacres and deportations of Armenians is still
    being played down or denied by the modern Turkish government,
    contradicting the idea of reconciliation promoted by the European
    Union, according to the motion, which was submitted by all
    parliamentary groups. It stopped short of describing the killings
    as genocide.

    "The lower house of parliament regrets that an extensive discussion
    of events in the then Ottoman Empire still is not possible and that
    academics and writers who want to look into this part of Turkish
    history are being prosecuted and defamed," the motion said.

    Turkey denies allegations that the Ottoman Empire's treatment of its
    Armenian subjects in 1915 was a planned genocide, arguing that an
    Armenian rebellion caused clashes and the resulting deaths.

    The European Union, with which Turkey is due to start membership talks
    Oct. 3, has said the dispute with Armenia clouds Turkey's bid to join.

    "It's not possible to accept the notion of 'genocide' without relying
    on documents and information," Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan said at a news conference in Beirut, Lebanon today.

    "We are proud of our history. Therefore we cannot stand by while this
    issue is being used as a political tool, as free political capital
    by lobby groups."

    Turkey should take responsibility for the deaths because the evidence
    of genocide is "abundantly documented," the Purdue University,
    Indiana-based International Association of Genocide Scholars said in
    a letter to Erdogan on April 6.

    During a visit to Turkey on May 4, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder
    urged the Armenian government to accept a proposal by Turkey that
    scholars from both countries study the genocide claims.

    More than one million Armenians died in massacres, on death marches
    through the Syrian desert or in camps, the German motion said.

    Acknowledging the former injustice would help normalize the
    relationship between Armenia and Turkey and stabilize the Caucasus
    region, it said.

    The lawmakers said Turkey is showing some positive signs that it
    is beginning to address the issue, such as an invitation to Turks
    of Armenian origin by the Turkish National Assembly to talk about
    the crimes, an exchange of documents between Turkish and Armenian
    historians and Erdogan opening the first Armenian museum in Istanbul.

    Still, they criticized the cancellation by the Turkish Justice
    Ministry of a conference on the subject by Turkish academics that
    had been due to take place in May.

    - The motion also expressed regret that the German government of
    the time didn't act to prevent the killings even though it was aware
    of what was happening. Germany and Turkey were allies in the First
    World War.
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