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ANKARA: Conference On Armenians During Collapse Of Ottoman Empire

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  • ANKARA: Conference On Armenians During Collapse Of Ottoman Empire

    The Anatolian Times
    Published: 9/24/2005

    Conference On Armenians During Collapse Of Ottoman Empire
    ISTANBUL - Associate professor Halil Berktay of Sabanci University said on
    Saturday that the word ''genocide'' should be left aside, and noted that
    everybody should try to understand what had happened in 1915 and 1916.
    The Conference entitled ''The Armenians during the Collapse of the Ottoman
    Empire'' is being held at Istanbul's Bogazici University.
    During the conference, professor Fikret Adanir of Faculty of History in
    German Ruhr University said, ''a Turkish government may have to accept
    genocide accusation one day due to impositions. This may please some
    circles. But, I don't think a concession made as a result of such
    impositions will be beneficial for the future of Turkish-Armenian
    relations.''
    Adanir said that ''he was using the expression 'Armenian genocide' in his
    academic works'', and added, ''the dimension of the 1915-16 relocation is
    far beyond than mass killings. A whole nation, regardless of whether they
    were women, men, elderly or children, were relocated and died on the roads.
    Their properties were seized, while those who survived this incident were
    not allowed to return. There was an Armenian nationalism and a project to
    establish an Armenian state. Majority of the Ottoman Armenians might have a
    sympathy towards the enemies of the state (Ottoman Empire) those days. But,
    all these cannot compensate the tragedy which was intentionally caused by
    the Ottoman government and which it (the empire) ignored.''
    On the other hand, associate professor Oktay Ozel of Bilkent University said
    that days between the War of 93 and 1923 was a period of tension and
    clashes. ''At the end of this period, the Black Sea region was purified from
    non-Muslim population,'' added Ozel.
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