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Loophole allows Armenian genocide conference to go ahead in Turkey

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  • Loophole allows Armenian genocide conference to go ahead in Turkey

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    September 23, 2005, Friday
    14:47:17 Central European Time

    Loophole allows Armenian genocide conference to go ahead in Turkey

    ANKARA


    An academic conference in Istanbul looking into the events of 1915
    during which hundreds of thousands of Armenians were killed is set to
    go ahead despite a court injunction, after organizers discovered a
    legal loophole in the court order on Friday.

    The injunction bans the conference venue but not the meeting itself,
    which is now to take place Saturday at a new location.

    The events of more than 90 years ago are still a sore topic in
    Turkey. Armenian historians claim that as many as 1.5 million
    Armenians were killed when they rose up in revolt against the
    crumbling Ottoman Empire during the First World War and that the
    massacres constituted genocide. The official Turkish line is that
    while many Armenians may have died in the struggle it was not
    genocide.

    More than a dozen European countries have passed resolutions
    specifically stating that the events of 1915 did constitute a
    genocide and that Turkey should accept this and make appropriate
    apologies.

    In a decision blasted by the Turkish government and E.U. officials,
    the Istanbul 4th Administrative Court, acting on a request from a
    nationalist group called the Lawyers Union Foundation, ordered that
    the conference be cancelled.

    But it emerged on Friday that the order only applied to Istanbul's
    Bogazici and Sabanci universities where the conference was to take
    place and not other universities in Turkey.

    Bilgi University, also in Istanbul, later announced it would allow
    the conference to take place on its campus on Saturday, a day later
    than originally planned.

    "The court decision has not only trampled upon academic and
    university autonomy as it is universally understood but also
    trespassed very strongly on freedom of expression ... as well as the
    Turkish constitution itself," Halil Berktay, a member of the
    organizing committee told reporters Friday.

    This week's postponement is the second delay to hit the conference.
    Organizers cancelled the original May 25 date after Justice Minister
    Cemil Cicek described the gathering as a "stab in the back".

    Cicek has since tempered his comments and on Friday said that the
    conference could go ahead but told NTV television that he didn't
    regard the timing as appropriate.

    The controversy comes two weeks after prosecutors filed charges
    against Turkey's internationally famous author Orhan Pamuk for
    "denigrating the country" when he told a Swiss news magazine that "a
    million Armenians were killed". Pamuk faces up to three years
    imprisonment if found guilty.

    The conference organisers expect protests from ultra-nationalists and
    the gathering is likely to take place under tight security. dpa cw sr
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