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ANKARA: Swiss F.M. Due In Turkey

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  • ANKARA: Swiss F.M. Due In Turkey

    Turkish Press
    March 28 2005

    Swiss F.M. Due In Turkey

    ANKARA - Micheline Calmy-Rey, chief of the Federal Department of
    Foreign Affairs of Switzerland, will visit Turkey between March 29th
    and 31st upon the invitation of Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah
    Gul, sources said on Monday.

    Calmy-Rey is expected to visit capital Ankara, commercial hub of
    Istanbul and southeastern city of Diyarbakir.

    Micheline Calmy-Rey is scheduled to meet Gul and be received by
    Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer.

    Turkey's European Union (EU) membership bid, so-called Armenian
    genocide allegations, ways of attracting Swiss investors to Turkey
    and increasing trade volume and enhancement of relations between the
    two countries will be taken up during Calmy-Rey's talks with Turkish
    officials.

    During her stay in Turkey, Calmy-Rey will try to eliminate the
    negative impact of the resolution adopted by Switzerland two years
    ago regarding the so-called Armenian genocide on bilateral relations.


    As two countries plan to increase their trade volume of 4 billion
    USD, Turkish State Minister Kursad Tuzmen is expected to visit
    Switzerland this June. One of the other steps aiming to improve
    economic relations will be the visit of Joseph Deiss, former state
    minister of Switzerland who is appointed to the ministry for economy.
    Deiss is expected to visit Turkey in September. Switzerland is the
    sixth country having investments in Turkey.

    One of the targets of not only Calmy-Rey's but also other visits is
    to help the two nations and officials to understand each other and
    different political systems. In this context, reciprocal visits are
    expected to be made between the two parliaments and press organs.

    During these meetings, Turkish officials are expected to once more
    demand that the PKK be considered as a terrorist network in
    Switzerland.

    EFFECTS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ALLEGATIONS

    The main development which had a negative impact on Turkish-Swiss
    relations is the resolutions adopted by this country regarding the
    so-called Armenian genocide.

    Bilateral relations between Turkey and Switzerland had become tense
    after Vaud canton in Switzerland adopted a resolution acknowledging
    the so-called Armenian genocide, and after Calmy-Rey delayed her
    visit to Ankara scheduled for October 2003.

    Ankara had told Swiss authorities that it would be better if
    Calmy-Rey delayed her visit, and paid this visit in a future date.
    But, Calmy-Rey, who considered Turkey's sensitivity as
    ''exaggerated'', said that they had conveyed their uneasiness about
    this incident to Turkish authorities, and added, ''this incident is
    not facilitating our bilateral relations which we have established
    with patience in recent years.''

    After this resolution of Vaud canton, the Swiss Federal Assembly's
    National Council wing also adopted a resolution on the so-called
    Armenian genocide. This resolution was strongly condemned by Turkish
    Foreign Ministry.

    In the meantime, Tages-Anzeiger newspaper published in Zurich wrote a
    story in which it claimed that Calmy-Rey's visit to Ankara was
    delayed because a Turkish intelligence officer saw Calmy-Rey talking
    with a supporter of the terrorist organization in a reception more
    than a minute.

    The newspaper also wrote that Turkish intelligence officer informed
    the Swiss police about this meeting of the foreign minister, and the
    note sent to the Swiss police was later conveyed to then Swiss
    President Pascal Couchepin.

    Swiss chief prosecutor's office considered the claim that Turkish
    intelligence officer saw that Calmy-Rey talked to a supporter of the
    terrorist organization and therefore, Calmy-Rey's visit to Turkey was
    cancelled, as ''bewildering''.

    SWITZERLAND'S VIEW

    On the other hand, views of Swiss diplomats about the so-called
    Armenian genocide are different than the resolutions adopted.

    Diplomats working at the department of the Swiss Foreign Ministry
    responsible for Turkey stated that ''tragic incidents that occurred
    those days could not be classified as genocide'', and said that this
    matter should be taken up by the historians.

    Stressing that the resolutions adopted by Vaud canton and the
    national council ''were not a part of the State policy of
    Switzerland'', the same diplomats said that the government was not
    influential over the parliament and administration of the cantons
    within the framework of the federal system in Switzerland.
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