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Italy: Turkey: Armenian Genocide conference is postponed

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  • Italy: Turkey: Armenian Genocide conference is postponed

    AKI, Italy
    May 27 2005

    TURKEY: ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CONFERENCE IS POSTPONED


    Istanbul, 27 May (AKI) - A conference questioning Turkey's official
    policy that the 1915-21 mass killing of Armenians under Ottoman rule
    never took place has been postponed following pressure from the
    government. The conference, initially slated to be held at the
    Bhosphorus University on Wednesday, provoked outrage among
    nationalists, after participants said they would challenge the
    commonly held view in Turkey that the deaths of an estimated 1.5
    million Armenians was due to the epidemics and other hardships
    suffered during deportations after separatist Armenian militants
    joined sides with Turkey's World War I enemy Russia and started
    killing Turkish civillians.

    `How can this be a scientific conference? Some of the participants
    are even not historians' wrote Ruhat Mengi in the daily Vatan,
    apparently refering to one of the conference organisers, Prof. Murat
    Belge, Head of the Literature Department at Bilgi University, the
    only Turk who has joined the 90th anniversary commemorations of the
    genocide in the Armenian capital Yerevan on 24 April.


    But the strongest criticism came from the Turkish justice minister
    and government spokesman, Cemil Cicek.

    `The conference would be tantamount to stabbing Turkey in the back,'
    he said.

    After Cicek's remarks the Bosphorus University announced that the
    conference had been postponed.


    The decision was welcomed by officials and others who refuse to even
    consider the Armenian allegations, but liberal columnists, conference
    participants and pro-democracy activists slammed the government's
    reaction.


    "I am very sad and disappointed. It would have been a forum that
    showed that democracy worked in Turkey and that different voices can
    be heard" said Muge Gocek, a Turkish professor of sociology at
    Michigan University who traveled to Istanbul for the conference.

    `The biggest mistake is criticising the conference as being
    one-sided. People like Cicek think that they have the authority to
    decide what is in the `national interest' and they shape the society
    according to their decisions', Belge wrote in his column in the
    Radikal daily on Friday.

    The liberal paper's headline on Thursday read: `Zero tolerance on
    thought'

    The Human Rights Association (IHD) was also critical of Cicek.

    "We strongly condemn the politicians and especially the justice
    minister who prevented the Armenian conference from taking place
    through pressure, threats and statements that make [organisers]
    targets" the IHD said in a statement on Wednesday.

    Hans Jorg Kretschmer, the European Union Commission's representative
    to Turkey said that the government's did not fit in with ideas of
    democracy.

    Organisers have said they intend to hold the conference, however a
    date has yet to be specified.
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