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  • Turks debate Armenian killings

    Turks debate Armenian killings

    Aljazeera.Net
    AP
    Sunday 25 September 2005, 3:11 Makka Time, 0:11 GMT


    Academics have held the first-ever public discussions in Turkey about the
    early 20th century mass killings of Armenians, prompting criticism from
    Turkish nationalists who called it an attempt to accuse Turkey of genocide.

    The European Union called the academic conference on Saturday a test of
    freedom of expression in Turkey, which is hoping to begin talks for
    membership in the bloc next month.

    The academic conference had been cancelled twice, once in May after the
    justice minister said organisers were "stabbing the people in the back," and
    again on Thursday when an Istanbul court ordered the conference closed and
    demanded to know the academic qualifications of the speakers.

    Heavy police presence

    Police presence at the rescheduled conference was heavy, with 11 police
    buses and an armoured vehicle outside the venue, and dozens of officers in
    riot gear keeping hundreds of shouting protesters at bay. Some protesters
    pelted arriving panellists with eggs and rotten tomatoes.

    Inside, the audience of more than 300 people was quiet and respectful, as
    only those invited by the organising committee and pre-approved members of
    the media were allowed past security.
    The Armenian issue stirs deep passions among Turks, who are being pushed by
    many in the international community to say that their fathers and
    grandfathers carried out the first genocide of the 20th century.

    The issue has been a taboo for many years in Turkey, with those who speak
    out against the killings risking prosecution by a Turkish court. But an
    increasing number of Turkish academics have called for a review of the
    killings.

    Stating that Turks may have committed genocide offends a large percentage of
    the Turkish people, who see the Ottoman Empire as a symbol of Turkish
    greatness, and the war that coincided with its collapse as a heroic struggle
    for national independence.

    Sensitive subject

    In a sign of the deep sensitivity of the subject, the panellists, all
    Turkish speakers, carefully avoided any emotional language during the first
    day of the two-day conference.

    "Everyone waits for you to pronounce the genocide word - if you do one side
    applauds and the other won't listen," said Halil Berktay, programme
    coordinator of the history department at Sabanci University, speaking at the
    conference on Saturday.

    Several governments around the world have recognised the killings of as many
    as 1.5 million Armenians in the late Ottoman Empire as genocide.

    Turkey vehemently denies the charge, admitting that many Armenians were
    killed, but saying the death toll is inflated and that Armenians were killed
    along with Turks in civil unrest and intercommunal fighting as the Ottoman
    Empire collapsed between 1915 and 1923.

    Court order

    After the conference was shut down on Thursday, Turkey drew condemnation
    from the European Commission, which said it deplored the decision and would
    make note of it in a progress report on Turkey to be released 9 November.

    Organisers skirted the court order by changing the venue of the conference.

    "This is a fight of 'can we discuss this thing, or can we not discuss this
    thing?'" Murat Belge, a member of the organising committee, said at the
    conference opening.

    "This is something that's directly related to the question of what kind of
    country Turkey is going to be."

    The court-ordered cancellation on Thursday was an embarrassment for the
    country's leaders, who are set to begin EU negotiations on 3 October.

    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul lamented that "there's no one better at
    hurting themselves than us," and sent a letter wishing the organisers a
    successful conference.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also condemned the court's decision,
    saying it did not befit a democratic country.

    http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/F2AA7446-EC57-4AA4-8182-17440C765707.htm
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