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Turk PM raps Armenia on genocide claims at meeting

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  • Turk PM raps Armenia on genocide claims at meeting

    Turk PM raps Armenia on genocide claims at meeting

    WARSAW, May 17 (Reuters) - Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan
    scolded Armenia on Tuesday for raising the issue of the alleged
    genocide of its people 90 years ago during a summit of a pan-European
    human rights watchdog.

    Armenia says some 1.5 million of its people were killed in a
    systematic genocide by Ottoman Turks during and after World War One.
    Turkey denies any genocide, saying the Armenians were victims of a
    partisan war in which many Turks also died. Addressing a session of
    the Council of Europe, the continent's top human rights body, Erdogan
    said it was for historians, not governments or parliaments, to judge
    what actually happened on Ottoman territory nearly a century ago.

    "We do not appreciate these efforts to lobby (in favour of the Armenian
    claims), lobbying that has no basis in historical documents and facts,"
    said Erdogan, clearly irritated.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharyan mentioned the genocide issue
    during his address to the Council on Monday and he thanked those
    countries which backed Yerevan's stance.

    Turkey is worried the Armenian claims could harm its plans to begin
    European Union entry talks in October. Some EU politicians, notably
    in France, home to Europe's biggest Armenian diaspora, say Ankara
    must accept the genocide claims.

    Erdogan renewed an appeal to Armenia to open its archives from the
    period to historians to demonstrate its good faith.

    "We opened our archives, one million classified documents. We ask
    Armenia to open its archives and we ask other countries to contribute
    too... If there are decisions to be taken after that, they will be
    taken. But not on the basis of lobbying and parliamentary decisions
    based on such lobbying," he said.

    Several parliaments, including those of France, Canada and most
    recently Poland -- which is hosting the Council of Europe talks --
    have passed resolutions backing the genocide claims.

    Turkish media said Erdogan had cancelled a planned meeting in Warsaw
    with Kocharyan which had been designed to underline Turkey's desire
    for better ties with Armenia as a protest against the reference to
    the genocide issue.

    Turkey broke off diplomatic ties with the tiny ex-Soviet republic
    in 1993 over Armenia's occupation of territory inside Azerbaijan,
    a regional Turkic-speaking ally of Ankara.

    05/17/05 10:46 ET

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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