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AAA: Turk Gvt Calls Armenian Genocide Conference Planners "Traitors"

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  • AAA: Turk Gvt Calls Armenian Genocide Conference Planners "Traitors"

    Armenian Assembly of America
    1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
    Washington, DC 20036
    Phone: 202-393-3434
    Fax: 202-638-4904
    Email: [email protected]
    Web: www.armenianassembly.org

    PRESS RELEASE
    May 25, 2005
    CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
    Email: [email protected]

    TURKISH GOVERNMENT CALLS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CONFERENCE PLANNERS "TRAITORS"
    Organizers Postpone Istanbul Conference Indefinitely

    Washington, DC - The Armenian Assembly of America expressed outrage
    today over the Turkish government's latest assault on free speech, this
    time threatening its own citizens for organizing an unprecedented
    conference on the Armenian Genocide and challenging the state's official
    policy of denial. Due to the intense government pressure, event
    organizers indefinitely postponed the Conference which was to begin in
    Istanbul today.

    In a press statement issued last night, organizers said that more than
    720 people were to participate in the three-day Conference at Bosphorus
    University entitled, "Ottoman Armenians during the Decline of the
    Empire: Issues of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy." The
    postponement came after Istanbul's chief public prosecutor threatened
    yesterday to start criminal proceedings against conference organizers
    and demanded copies of all academic papers that were to be presented.

    Additionally, Minister of Justice Cemil Cicek's diatribe in the Turkish
    Parliament yesterday, coupled with his accusations of treason against
    Conference participants for allegedly questioning Ankara's denial of the
    Genocide, also led to the eventual cancellation. According to Agence
    France-Presse, Cicek said, "We must put an end to this cycle of treason
    and insult, of spreading propaganda against the [Turkish] nation by
    people who belong to it."

    Hrant Dink, editor-in-chief of Agos - an Armenian newspaper based in
    Istanbul - told Assembly leaders that organizers were under direct
    government pressure to call off the Conference.

    "The thoughts and speeches of the Conference participants, historians,
    while important, are not as important as what the Turkish government is
    doing," said Dink. "If the Turkish government will not even allow open
    dialogue and discussion for members of its own society, how can it
    possibly expect to enter into dialogue with others?"

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan last month called for
    further study of the Armenian Genocide, while official policy still
    rejects that Turkey committed genocide against its Armenian population
    90 years ago. Moreover, Article 305 of the Turkish penal code
    criminalizes public references to the Armenian Genocide.

    "In the context of a law criminalizing speech on the Armenian Genocide,
    the ongoing threats against any nation that reaffirms the facts of
    history and now the outrageous cancellation of an academic conference,
    Erdogan's call for a historical commission must be rejected as a
    disingenuous maneuver to delay the inevitable. Its current assault on
    academic freedom must likewise be condemned," said Board of Directors
    Chairman Anthony Barsamian.

    Turkey, for its part, characterizes itself as a mature democracy with
    hopes of becoming the first Muslim nation to accede to the European
    Union. But before the EU opens its doors, it has asked Turkey to
    normalize relations with neighboring Armenia in addition to its
    universal human, minority and civil rights criteria. The European
    Parliament has gone further, calling upon Turkey to recognize the
    Armenian Genocide. And senior European officials have repeatedly called
    on Turkey to deal with the fact of the Armenian Genocide as part of its
    ascension process.

    A European Union diplomat today told Reuters that Cicek's remarks are
    "unbelievable."

    "It not only kills the government's policy on the Armenian issue. It
    will also kill support for Turkey's EU drive," the diplomat told
    Reuters.

    Meanwhile in Washington, Armenian issues supporters also expressed their
    outrage with Turkey's attempts to scuttle talk on the Armenian Genocide.


    "On subjects that the Turkish government considers sensitive, there
    appear to be no constraints on what officials will do to prevent free
    speech and debate," said Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues
    Co-Chairs Congressmen Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank Pallone, Jr.
    (D-NJ). "Internally the subject is criminalized, academic conferences
    are cancelled and individuals are condemned as traitors. Actions like
    this seriously undermine the credibility of Turkish Prime Minister
    Erdogan's proposal to establish a historical commission to study 'the
    developments and events of 1915.' "

    The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
    nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness of
    Armenian issues. It is a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt membership organization.


    ### NR#2005-053
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