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Turkish Court Blocks Armenian Genocide Conference

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  • Turkish Court Blocks Armenian Genocide Conference

    TURKISH COURT BLOCKS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CONFERENCE

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    September 22, 2005, Thursday
    16:59:05 Central European Time

    Ankara

    A Turkish court has banned an academic conference on the massacres
    of Armenians in 1915 by Ottoman Turks, planned for this week, CNN
    Turk reported Thursday

    The Istanbul 4th Administrative Court ordered the ban on Monday
    after a group from the Lawyers Union Foundation applied to have the
    conference cancelled. Bogazici University, where the conference was
    due to start on Friday, received news of the order on Thursday.

    The circumstances surrounding the 1915 massacres of hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians continue to arouse controversy in Turkey today,
    with the official line being that while many died the incidents cannot
    be regarded as a genocide.

    More than a dozen European countries have passed resolutions
    specifically stating that the events of 1915 did constitute a genocide
    and that Turkey should accept this and make appropriate apologies.

    The conference was to include a number of Turkish historians who
    are critical of the official stance. It was originally to have taken
    place on May 25 but organizers decided to postpone it after Justice
    Minister Cemil Cicek described the gathering as a "stab in the back".

    Cicek's comments came despite assurances from Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan that Turkey has completely opened its archives and is
    prepared to allow historians discuss the issue.

    Erdogan said Thursday he regretted the court's decision saying it
    did not comply with democratic rights.

    The court decision comes two weeks after prosecutors filed charges
    against Turkey's internationally famous author Orhan Pamuk for
    "denigrating the country" when he told a Swiss news magazine that
    "a million Armenians were killed". Pamuk faces up to three years
    imprisonment if found guilty.

    The latest court decision is sure to embarass the government as it
    attempts to convince European countries to give the go ahead for E.U.

    membership talks to begin on October 3. dpa cw sr
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