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Ankara Under Fire Over Armenian Conference Cancellation

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  • Ankara Under Fire Over Armenian Conference Cancellation

    Agence France Presse
    May 26 2005

    Ankara Under Fire Over Armenian Conference Cancellation

    By Sibel Utku Bila

    (AFP) - Turkey came under fire Thursday for halting a landmark
    conference questioning the official line on the mass killings of
    Armenians under the Ottoman Empire, as European Union diplomats
    warned that Ankara's democratic credentials had taken a serious blow.


    Istanbul's prestigious Bogazici University, where the gathering was
    to open Wednesday, put off the event after Justice Minister Cemil
    Cicek accused the participants -- Turkish academics and intellectuals
    who dispute Ankara's version of the 1915-1917 massacres -- of
    "treason." Cicek condemned the initiative as "a stab in the back to
    the Turkish nation" and said the organizers deserved to be
    prosecuted.

    The killings, one of the most controversial episodes in Ottoman
    history, is rarely discussed in schools and the aborted conference
    would have been the first by Turkish personalities to question the
    official stand on the events. Several countries have recognized the
    massacres as genocide -- a theory Turkey fiercely rejects -- and
    Brussels has urged Ankara to face its past and expand freedom of
    speech.

    "The remarks of the justice minister are unacceptable. This is an
    authoritarian approach raising questions over Turkey's reform
    process," a diplomat from an EU country told AFP on the condition of
    anonymity.

    "Now it is a real watershed. We expect government action to correct
    Cicek's remarks," he said. "It's up to the government to decide what
    to do. Doing nothing would be also a choice, but certainly not in
    favor of Turkey's EU membership prospects."

    Another EU diplomat regretted the postponement of the conference
    because it "would have reflected the evolution taking place in
    Turkish society." The EU is looking forward for the conference to be
    rescheduled, he said, adding: "The Europeans will keep on insisting
    that civil society has a great role to play in Turkey."

    The Turkish media too lashed out at the justice minister, saying his
    outburst cast a pall on freedom of expression in the country and
    played into the hands of a mounting Armenian campaign to have the
    massacres recognized internationally as genocide.

    "Zero tolerance to freedom," the Radikal daily trumpeted on its front
    page, while Milliyet's headline declared: "Democracy takes a blow."

    "What, really, is treason? To hold a conference in order to start a
    debate in Turkey on a Turkish problem debated almost everywhere in
    the world, or to brand as 'traitors' people who may think differently
    at a time when Turkey is waging a battle for democracy in the face of
    many obstacles?" wrote columnist Murat Celikkan in Radikal.

    "Cemil Cicek should resign as justice minister and if does not, he
    should be forced to do so," he said.
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