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Seminar on 1915 Massacre of Armenians to Go Ahead

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  • Seminar on 1915 Massacre of Armenians to Go Ahead

    New York Times
    Sept 23 2005

    Seminar on 1915 Massacre of Armenians to Go Ahead


    ISTANBUL, Sept. 23 - After a Turkish court's decision to cancel an
    academic conference on the killing of hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians during World War I, the conference's organizers said Friday
    that the event would go ahead at a new location on Saturday. The
    organizers were encouraged by a wave of support from the European
    Union and senior Turkish government officials.

    A court on Thursday blocked Bogazici University in Istanbul from
    holding the event, a debate and symposium on the killing of Armenians
    by Ottoman forces in the eastern part of what is now Turkey. In its
    ruling, the court called into question the credentials of the
    scholars taking part.

    It was the second time the courts blocked the conference at the
    request of nationalist groups. The event was canceled in May as well,
    and at that time Justice Minister Cemil Cicek condemned continued
    attempts to hold the meeting as "treason" and a "stab in the back of
    the Turkish nation."

    But the conference's organizers said it would go ahead on Saturday,
    after Bilgi University in Istanbul agreed to be the new host. One of
    the leaders of the conference, Prof. Halil Berktay, said integrity of
    scholars was "beyond the judiciary" to decide.

    The conference is to be the first time in Turkey that the killings
    have been publicly examined. More than 50 intellectuals, scholars and
    writers are to analyze the massacres, which took place from 1915 to
    1917 and have been recognized as genocide by several European
    governments. Turkey has long maintained that the deaths were part of
    a war in which an equal number of Turks died.

    The court's action on Thursday came as a blow to supporters of
    Turkey's application for membership in the European Union, who have
    considered the conference as an opportunity to prove that the country
    had the potential for greater democratization and freedom of speech.

    Turkey's chief negotiator with the European Union, Ali Babacan, said
    the decision was part of an attempt by nationalists to sabotage
    Turkey's membership talks, which are to start on Oct. 3. The ruling
    also was condemned by Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul and Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
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