Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Armenia rejects Turkish offer for joint study on 'genocide'

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

  • ANKARA: Armenia rejects Turkish offer for joint study on 'genocide'

    Turkish Daily News
    Friday, March 11 2005

    Armenia rejects Turkish offer for joint study on 'genocide'
    Friday, March 11, 2005


    ANKARA - Turkish Daily News


    The Armenian government turned down a proposal offered by Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan for a joint study to be conducted
    by Turkish and Armenian historians on allegations that the Armenians
    were subject to a genocide at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire in
    the beginning of the last century.

    Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian dismissed the offer,
    which Erdogan announced after a solidarity meeting with main
    opposition party leader Deniz Baykal in Ankara, as "groundless," the
    Anatolia news agency said.

    "We have opened our archives to those people who claim there was a
    genocide. If they are sincere, they should also open their archives,"
    Erdogan said on Monday. "Teams of historians from both sides should
    conduct studies on these archives. We are ready to take steps on this
    issue."

    Turkey denies Armenian allegations that 1.5 million Armenians were
    killed as part of a systematic attempt to exterminate them, or
    genocide, from 1915-1918. It says the Armenians were the victims of a
    partisan fight, during which Turks were also killed and accuses the
    Armenians of attacking the Turkish population in eastern Anatolia as
    they sided with invading Russian forces.

    Oskanian, conversely, maintained that the issue was settled, saying
    historians had already said what they had to say. "They have nothing
    else to do," he was quoted as saying.

    The Turkish side argues that Armenian allegations are not
    scientifically supported. Parliament is preparing to send a letter to
    the British House of Lords and House of Commons asking British
    lawmakers to declare a book titled "The Treatment of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire, 1915-1916," one of the basic sources referred to by
    Armenians in their allegations, as wartime propaganda material.
    Historian Arnold Toynbee and British diplomat James Bryce wrote the
    book during the World War I era. The Turkish side says the book was
    designed to convince neutral countries, particularly the United
    States, to get involved in the war by portraying Ottoman forces as
    "inhumane creatures."



    Armenian campaign picks up momentum in US:

    A powerful Armenian lobby in the United States has launched an
    initiative to win the administration's backing for its genocide
    allegations.

    Efforts made by the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA),
    a radical diaspora group, urge Armenians in the United States to send
    letters to President George W. Bush, asking him to "properly
    recognize" the allegations of genocide. ANCA underlined in a
    statement that there were rifts in Turkish-U.S ties and called on
    Armenians to make use of this situation.
Working...
X