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ANKARA: US historian rejects Armenian genocide claims

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  • ANKARA: US historian rejects Armenian genocide claims

    ANKARA - Turkish Daily News

    Today is Tuesday, March 22 2005 12:34 pm GMT+2 updated at 12:00 P.M.

    US historian rejects Armenian genocide claims

    Tuesday, March 22, 2005

    ANKARA - Turkish Daily News


    There was a war in Eastern Anatolia during the World War 1, towards the
    end of the late Ottoman Empire, not a genocide campaign against Armenians
    living in the region, a renowned U.S. historian said yesterday.

    Professor Justin McCarthy, who came for a several-day visit to Turkey at
    the invitation of the opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), told
    reporters that the Ottoman Empire was reacting to a group of people
    revolting against the government, when asked to comment on the events of
    1915, which Armenians allege amounted to genocide against their ancestors.

    Turkey categorically rejects charges of genocide, saying the killings came
    as the Ottoman Empire tried to quell civil unrest sparked by an Armenian
    revolt in hope of getting an independent state in Eastern Anatolia with
    support from Russia.

    Armenians; however, have stepped up a campaign for international
    recognition for their claims as the 90th anniversary of the alleged genocide
    on April 24 is approaching.

    Deniz Baykal, chairman of the CHP, said McCarthy's thesis should not be
    confined to a restricted academic circle but get widespread public
    attention.

    "This is of great importance. We believe this way we will have the chance
    to correct a grave deception," Baykal said and added: "We want to make sure
    the debate (on the alleged genocide) will shift away from a political
    framework to a scientific one based on historical documents."

    The CHP recently received backing from the governing Justice and
    Development Party (AKP) for its call on all the countries concerned to open
    national archives to researchers so that authenticity of the Armenian claims
    could be judged. The party calls for a joint Turkish-Armenian study of
    archives and says an international organization, such as UNESCO, could
    supervise whether the investigation is carried out in a scientific manner.

    McCarthy, a historian and an expert on Ottoman history, teaches at the
    University of Louisville in Kentucky.
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