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  • ANKARA: Turkey ready to face past

    Turkish Daily News
    March 10 2005

    Turkey ready to face past
    Thursday, March 10, 2005

    The CHP's Elekdag is confident that Ankara is now well placed to tell
    the West to encourage scholarly investigation into genocide
    allegations instead of just listening to the Armenians and passing
    resolutions recognizing what they say as fact

    FATMA DEMÝRELLÝ

    ANKARA - Turkish Daily News


    In a rare show of solidarity, the Turkish ruling and opposition
    parties have joined forces to call for an impartial investigation by
    historians into allegations that Armenians were subject to genocide
    at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire, a bold response to a
    decades-old Armenian campaign and mounting international pressure to
    force Turkey to recognize the alleged genocide.

    The two-party agreement, which came after a Tuesday meeting between
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and main opposition Republican
    People's Party (CHP) leader Deniz Baykal, requires a three-step
    strategy of initiating a joint investigation of Turkish and Armenian
    historians; opening of national archives to scholars, not only in
    Turkey and Armenia but also in other countries concerned; and the
    establishment by an international organization, such as UNESCO, of a
    notary mechanism to make sure the investigation will be conducted in
    a strictly scientific manner.

    The initiative is hailed as unique because it represents a break
    with the traditional Turkish reaction of denying allegations and
    condemning parliamentary acknowledgements of them, which has prompted
    calls in Europe for Turkey to dare to face its past.

    "This is motivated by a desire to be proactive; a desire to stop
    being defensive and start an offensive," said Þükrü Elekdag, a deputy
    in the CHP, during an interview with the Turkish Daily News. A former
    diplomat who worked extensively on the Armenian issue, Elekdag is the
    architect of the strategy that was adopted on Tuesday by both the
    ruling and opposition parties.

    Parliaments in a number of European countries have passed
    resolutions recognizing the allegations that 1.5 million Armenians
    were killed in a genocide campaign from 1915-1918, the twilight years
    of the Ottoman Empire. Turkey denies the allegations and says
    Armenians were killed in a partisan war that also claimed many Muslim
    Turkish lives. Turkey also accuses Armenians of carrying out
    massacres while siding with invading Russian troops. No serious
    scientific investigation has been carried out so far to shed light on
    this disputed in history.

    Turkey has threatened severing ties with countries whose
    parliaments acknowledged the allegations. Observers warn a much
    bigger wave of pressure to recognize the alleged genocide may descend
    upon Turkey in the months to come as Armenians across the world are
    preparing for large-scale commemoration activities to mark the 90th
    anniversary of the alleged genocide.

    Elekdag said Turkey has a solid case to make now before the
    Westerners are likely to push Turkey to recognize the Armenian
    allegations as facts.

    The issue is becoming more important in connection with Turkey's
    bid to join the European Union. Some conservative politicians in EU
    countries have already argued that Turkey's recognition of the
    alleged genocide must be a condition for further progress in its bid
    to join the EU.

    The call for a scientific study is likely to get a better reception
    in Europe than strong official condemnation of parliamentary acts by
    Turkey. One Western diplomat described the investigation proposal and
    the call for supervision by an international actor as "quite useful."

    "Parliaments in European countries have passed resolutions, and
    what we did was to appeal to European lawmakers not to do so. But now
    it is in a position to say something more meaningful. Turkey can now
    tell them to encourage the proposed scholarly investigation instead
    of passing resolutions on the basis of one-sided allegations,"
    Elekdag said.



    Getting 'Blue Book' right:

    The Turkish initiative also includes attempts to invalidate charges
    made in a World War I-era book written by British diplomat James
    Bryce and historian Arnold Toynbee called "The Treatment of Armenians
    in the Ottoman Empire, 1915-1916," or the "Blue Book," as it is more
    commonly known.

    Turkish parliamentarians are now planning to send a letter to the
    British House of Lords and House of Commons, asking the British
    Parliament to declare the book a "propaganda tool" and thus deny its
    arguments that Ottoman Turks had perpetrated a grave crime against
    humanity on Armenians in the era concerned.

    Elekdag called the book a "masterpiece of British wartime
    propaganda" designed to win over the wavering pro-Entente neutrals,
    in particular the United States. A letter drafted by Elekdag calling
    on British lawmakers to declare the book propaganda material includes
    footnotes referring to the British archives.

    The "Blue Book" is one of the basic and most frequently cited
    documents presented as a basis for Armenian genocide allegations.
    Elekdag said even the British investigators who were trying to find
    evidence for the alleged genocide to charge some 144 Turkish
    officials detained by the then occupying British forces in connection
    with the allegations did not use the book's arguments as a basis.


    --Boundary_(ID_IR6o91HA4ts9H75dUm74Gg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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