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ANKARA: Ottoman Archives Open to All, Including Armenian Researchers

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  • ANKARA: Ottoman Archives Open to All, Including Armenian Researchers

    Journal of Turkish Weekly
    March 29 2005

    Ottoman Archives Open to All, Including Armenian Researchers
    Ottoman archives promoted

    Prime Ministry State Archives Director General Yusuf Sarinay said
    that there were tens of thousands of documents in Turkish State
    Archives refuting the Armenian allegations.

    Holding a news conference, Sarinay said, ''Armenians have been making
    propaganda against Turkey for a long time. There are more than 1
    million documents related with Armenians directly and indirectly in
    our archives from 1870s to 1922. These documents are waiting for a
    scientific examination.''

    ''When we read those documents, we see that the Ottoman Empire
    decided to relocate Armenians to suppress a de facto uprising and put
    an end to Armenian's collaboration of Russian army, not toprevent a
    likely rebellion,'' he said.

    Noting that the allegations of so-called Armenian genocide were based
    on subjective works and evaluations like memories instead of
    scientific documents, Sarinay said, ''there are tens of thousands of
    documents in our archives refuting these allegations. Our basic
    target is that the history should be written objectively. Therefore,
    we have opened our archives to all scientists.''

    Recalling that April 24th was declared as ''day of genocide'' by
    Armenians, Sarinay told reporters, ''in fact, leading names of
    Armenian committees were arrested on that date. For instance, 235
    Armenian people were arrested in Istanbul. None of them was sentenced
    to death penalty or sent to exile. Some circles claim that Armenian
    artist Comidas was killed in the genocide. In fact, he was a member
    of the Armenian committees. He was arrested in Istanbul and served 14
    days in Cankaya Prison. He later left for Paris and died there.''

    ''Armenians created an imaginary history. The Republic of Turkey
    remained silent against their allegations till 1990s in order to
    prevent revival of past hatred, however, its silence did not resolve
    the issue. On the contrary, this silence was wrongly perceived as a
    sign of its being guilty,'' he said.

    Sarinay kept on saying, ''when we examine these documents as a whole,
    it is evident that the decision of the Ottoman Empire to relocate
    Armenians was totally legal. The Ottoman Empire had also made some
    arrangements about properties of Armenians, and adopted a law about
    return of these properties to Armenian people when they returned. The
    Ottoman Empire had never targeted a genocide. It had made such an
    temporary decision on political and military grounds.

    Western historians and Armenian diaspora ignore these documents to
    preserve their imaginary history.''

    ''There were many high-level Armenian officials in Istanbul in those
    days. If the Ottoman Empire had intended a genocide, it would have
    killed those officials first. The Ottoman Empire had sent notes to
    Spain, Denmark, Sweden and Switzerland in 1919, which had not been
    involved in the World War I, to send jurists. If they had sent
    jurists to Turkey, all those allegations would have been buried in
    the history,'' he stressed.

    ''Once again, we call on Directorate General of Armenian State
    Archives to pave the way for scientific studies. Also, archives of
    the American diaspora in the United States should be opened,'' he
    said.

    Upon a question, Sarinay told reporters, ''according to the latest
    population census in the Ottoman Empire, Armenians had a population
    of 1 million 161 thousand. Sources say that nearly 400 thousand
    Armenians had left for Russia, and 450-750 thousand Armenians had
    been subject of the relocation. However, warfare and epidemics made
    it impossible to clarify all these figures.''

    Turkish Prime Minister tayyip Erdogan and Turkish opposition leader
    Deniz Baykal had called the Armenian side to open their archives.
    Erdogan said Turkish archives were open to all, and Turkey expected
    the same from the Armenians and all related states. The Armenian
    Tashnak Archives are closed to researchers. The Armenian politicians
    argue that there is nothing to be discussed or researched because all
    of the reality is clear. Armenian Foreign Minister Vaskan Oskanyan
    said "the problem is not a matter of science but politics. Historians
    has nothing to discuss."

    JTW News desk. Compiled from Anatolian news agency and other nes
    sources.
    29 March 2005

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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