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Genocide scholars again met with barrage of protests in Turkey

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  • Genocide scholars again met with barrage of protests in Turkey

    Associated Press Worldstream
    September 25, 2005 Sunday 7:23 AM Eastern Time

    Genocide scholars again met with barrage of protests in Turkey

    by BENJAMIN HARVEY; Associated Press Writer

    ISTANBUL, Turkey

    Demonstrators throwing rotten tomatoes and eggs and shouting protests
    again greeted scholars debating the killings of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks early in the 20th Century on the second day of their conference
    on Sunday.

    The passionately opposed conference is the first public discussion in
    Turkey about the massacre of Armenians, and the European Union said
    it would be seen as a test of freedom of expression in Turkey, which
    is a candidate for EU membership.

    The group of about 20 protesters outside the conference venue was
    smaller than the hundreds who showed up on Saturday, and organizers
    of the conference say Turks have been surprisingly supportive of
    their efforts, despite some panelists suggesting that Ottoman Turks
    committed the first genocide of the 20th Century.

    Discussing the mass killings of Armenians has long been taboo in
    Turkey, and scholars who use the word genocide can be prosecuted
    under a clause in the Turkish penal code on insulting the national
    character.

    The academic conference had been canceled twice, once in May after
    the justice minister said organizers 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.

    "This is a fight of 'can we discuss this thing, or can we not discuss
    this thing?"' Murat Belge, a member of the organizing 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 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.

    "There are so many documents in hand with respect to the destruction
    of Armenians," said Taner Akcay, a Turkish-born professor at the
    University of Minnesota, and author of books on the subject
    including, "A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of
    Turkish Responsibility."

    On Saturday dozens of officers in riot gear kept hundreds of shouting
    protesters at bay. Some protesters pelted arriving panelists with
    eggs and rotten tomatoes.

    Inside, the audience of more than 300 people was restrained, as only
    those invited by the organizing committee and preapproved members of
    the media were allowed past security.

    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 in a country where many see the Ottoman
    Empire as a symbol of Turkish greatness.

    Several governments around the world have recognized 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.

    After the conference was shut down Thursday, Turkey drew condemnation
    from the European Commission.

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

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

    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul lamented that "there's no one better at
    hurting themselves than us," and sent a letter wishing the organizers
    a successful conference. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also
    condemned the court's decision, saying it did not befit a democratic
    country.

    The participants were all Turkish speakers and included members of
    Turkey's Armenian minority like Hrant Dink, the editor in chief of
    Agos, a weekly Armenian newspaper in Istanbul. There are some 70,000
    Armenians living in Istanbul.
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