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Turkey should take responsibility for Armenia Genocide

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  • Turkey should take responsibility for Armenia Genocide

    Pan Armenian News

    TURKEY SHOULD TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE


    22.06.2005 06:18

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The country, which has been Europe-oriented for 80 years
    and now bids for the EU should have enough courage and honesty to
    acknowledge its responsibility for the cloudy pages of its history, Deutche
    Welle reports. However, when the German parliament condemned the mass
    killing of Armenians by Turks 90 years ago, it sparked angry protest from
    Ankara. But if it wants to be taken seriously by the EU, it needs to face up
    to its past. In a vote June 17, Germany's main parliamentary parties joined
    forces to deplore the systematic murder of 1.5 million Armenians between
    1915 and 1916. Berlin is now urging Turkey to set up an independent
    committee of Turkish, Armenian and international historians to document what
    happened. The resolution looks set to test relations between Ankara and
    Berlin. So far, the German government has been a key supporter of Turkish EU
    aspirations. Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul described the resolution
    as one-sided and "provocative," and said German lawmakers had ignored
    repeated warnings of the harm the resolution would do to bilateral ties. No
    one intended to offend the Turkish people and none of the deputies voting
    for the resolution meant to spoil relations with Turkey. The matter concerns
    recognition of historical truth and reconciliation of the two nations.
    Armenia should also be interested in it. "Generations of Turks have grown up
    never learning about this tragedy," he said. "Now that it's being discussed,
    they're realizing how little they actually know. At the moment, we're
    experiencing a time of complete confusion", theorist Ahmet Insel says.
    Presently there is a possibility of discussion. However the Turkish Justice
    Minister prohibited an Armenian Genocide Conference. Armenia, on its part is
    not in a hurry to step forward, since Yerevan has not given a distinct
    response to Turkish Prime Minister's Erdogan's proposal. Though it is quite
    understandable, as what's the use of the Armenian-Turkish historical
    commission if the Turkish party is certain to say, `There was no Genocide'.
    Germany has been reluctant to address the issue of Turkish and Armenian
    history in the past largely due to its own 2.5 million Turkish residents.
    However, a member of the CSU/CSU bloc, Erwin Marschewski, said the EU value
    system required that countries "shine a spotlight on the dark pages of our
    history."
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