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Turkish court blocks a conference on the Armenian genocide

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  • Turkish court blocks a conference on the Armenian genocide

    AsiaNews.it, Italy
    Sept 22 2005

    Turkish court blocks a conference on the Armenian genocide

    This is the second time the meeting has been called off: among
    participants are several academics critical of the official
    government version about what happened in World War I.


    Ankara (AsiaNews) - An Istanbul court yesterday ordered that a
    university conference about the Armenian massacre during the Ottoman
    era be cancelled. At the meeting, which should have been held today
    in Istanbul, scholars and academics discussing the delicate question
    were expected to criticize the official government version of events.


    Between 1915 and 1923, more than one and a half million Armenians
    were killed. Turkey does not accept the definition of `genocide': the
    Ankara version is that 300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were
    killed in a `civil revolt' during the World War I, when the Armenians
    rebelled against Ottoman rule. Accusations of ethnic cleansing are
    defined by the Turkish government as `an invention to weaken the
    nation'.

    According to some western diplomats, forces within the state opposed
    to Turkey's membership in the European Union were probably behind the
    ruling. Negotiations over Turkey's entry in the EU are scheduled to
    start on 3 October. Yesterday's verdict was an embarrassment for the
    Turkish government. Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, condemned
    the court ruling and said the decision did not conform to what he
    called freedom and modernity in Turkey. He said the right to free
    speech was an essential part of democracy.

    The conference entitled "Ottoman Armenians of an Empire in Decline"
    was to have opened today at the Bosporus University in Istanbul. It
    was originally scheduled to take place in May but it was postponed
    after the Turkish Justice Minister said its purpose was to stab
    Turkey in the back.

    The case to halt the conference was brought by the Turkish Lawyers
    Union and other lawyers. However, the details of their complaint have
    not been made clear. The conference participants have declared they
    will launch an appeal and they are determined to go ahead with their
    work in the coming days.

    The Armenian massacre has long been a taboo subject in Turkey: until
    recently, even talking about it was illegal. Recently, a small circle
    of Turk scholars started to cast doubt on the government version, an
    unwelcome move in the eyes of many.

    The internationally acclaimed Turkish author, Orhan Pamuk, is due to
    appear in an Istanbul court on December 16 to defend himself against
    serious charges of `insulting Turkey's national dignity' by telling a
    Swiss newspaper that `one million Armenians and 30,000 Kurds had been
    killed in Turkey'. If found guilty, he faces three years in prison.

    EU enlargement commissioner Olli Rehn warned Turkey earlier this
    month that the legal persecution of Pamuk raised `serious
    preoccupations' about negotiations with Turkey.


    http://www.asianews.it/view.php?l=en&art=4179
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