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Turkish court's ban of Armenian conference is circumvented

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  • Turkish court's ban of Armenian conference is circumvented

    International Herald Tribune

    Turkish court's ban of Armenian conference is circumvented

    The Associated Press, Reuters

    SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2005

    ISTANBUL An Istanbul court's decision to block a conference on the World
    War I massacre of Armenians has embarrassed Turkey at a sensitive moment
    and angered EU states just 10 days before the planned start of EU entry
    talks.

    But conference organizers moved on Friday to circumvent the ruling,
    which banned it from two universities. A spokeswoman for a third
    Istanbul university said it would act as the host for the conference.

    Turkey has always denied claims that Ottoman Turkish forces committed
    genocide against Armenians during the war, but under pressure from the
    European Union it has called for historians to debate the issue, not
    politicians.

    The Istanbul university conference aimed to give historians that chance,
    but on Friday, when the conference was due to open, the debate was
    political rather than academic.

    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said the court verdict had "nothing to do
    with democracy." Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said Turkey had only
    itself to blame. "There is no one better than us when it comes to
    harming ourselves," he said.

    Late on Thursday, an Istanbul court barred two universities from playing
    host to the conference pending information on the qualifications of the
    speakers. The court also wanted to know who was participating and who
    was paying for it.

    But Justice Minister Cemil Cicek later said there was nothing to stop
    the conference from moving to another location.

    Aydin Ugur, president of Istanbul Bilgi University, said the conference
    would be held Saturday morning at Bilgi. He said the court's order had
    been directed at two other universities, and had "nothing to do with Bilgi."

    The European Commission condemned the court's verdict.

    Krisztina Nagy, the EU executive's spokeswoman for enlargement said that
    the timing of the ruling, coming a day before the conference, and the
    apparent lack of legal motivation behind it "looks like yet another
    provocation."

    Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn previously called a Turkish court's
    plans to prosecute a best-selling novelist, Orhan Pamuk, a provocation.
    Pamuk faces as much as three years in jail on charges of "denigrating
    the Turkish identity" on accusations he backed claims that Armenians
    suffered genocide 90 years ago. Turkey accepts many Armenians were
    killed during World War I, but says they were victims of a partisan
    conflict that also claimed thousands of Turkish lives. Turkey denies any
    systematic genocide.

    The Armenian conference had already been postponed in May after the
    justice minister accused its organizers of treason.

    Turkey closed its border and cut diplomatic ties with Armenia in 1993 to
    protest against Armenian occupation of the territory of Azerbaijan, a
    regional Turkic-speaking ally of Ankara.

    Turkish academics and European Union observers have insisted that the
    conference was not only a chance for Turkey to face one of the most
    sensitive issues in its history, but also a test of Turkey's willingness
    to permit open discourse.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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