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Turkish Court Orders Cancellation Of Academic Conference On Armenian

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  • Turkish Court Orders Cancellation Of Academic Conference On Armenian

    TURKISH COURT ORDERS CANCELLATION OF ACADEMIC CONFERENCE ON ARMENIAN MASSACRE
    By Benjamin Harvey

    The Associated Press
    09/22/05 13:45 EDT

    ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) - An Istanbul court on Thursday ordered the
    cancellation of an academic conference on the massacre of Armenians
    during the Ottoman Empire, casting greater doubt on whether Turkey
    is prepared to accept open discussion of controversial subjects.

    The conference was originally scheduled for May but was postponed
    after Justice Minister Cemil Cicek severely criticized it, saying it
    went against government efforts to counter an Armenian campaign to
    have the killings recognized as genocide.

    The case to close the conference was brought by the Turkish Lawyers
    Union and other lawyers.

    The conference was scheduled to deal with one of the most sensitive
    issues in Turkish politics - the killings of Armenians during
    the collapse of the Ottoman Empire around the time of World War I,
    which an increasing number of governments have officially recognized
    as genocide.

    Turkey says the killings took place during civil unrest and backing
    the genocide claim in Turkey can be a cause for prosecution.

    There was no immediate word from court officials on why the conference
    was canceled.

    The Anatolia news agency reported that the court said the hosts could
    appeal, but demanded a number of documents including the academic
    backgrounds of the participants, proof that invitees were of varying
    viewpoints and documents listing the financial backers of the speakers.

    Turkey came under international scrutiny after the original conference
    was postponed, with some critics saying it showed Turkey would not
    allow freedom of expression on sensitive subjects.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan immediately condemned the court's
    decision Thursday. Courts are independent in Turkey, however, and
    the prime minister has little power to overturn their decisions.

    Last month, Turkey opened a case against one of the country's most
    acclaimed contemporary writers, novelist Orhan Pamuk. Pamuk, who is
    often mentioned as a candidate for the Nobel Prize in literature,
    is scheduled to go before a Turkish court in December for the crime
    of insulting the Turkish national identity. His offending comment was
    made to a Swiss newspaper in regard to Turkey's killings of Armenians
    and Kurds.

    European Union officials have said they will be watching the Pamuk
    trial very closely, and some have suggested that Turkey's refusal
    to permit free expression could be a cause for halting EU membership
    negotiations, which are to begin Oct. 3.
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