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  • ANKARA: Conference On Armenians Concludes

    CONFERENCE ON ARMENIANS CONCLUDES

    NTV MSNBC, Turkey
    Sept 26 2005

    A conference discussing Armenians in the declining years of the
    Ottoman Empire found there was strong evidence that massacres and
    widespread deportations had been carried out, but stopped short of
    describing the acts as genocide.

    Guncelleme: 04:29 ET 26 Eylul 2005 PazartesiISTANBUL - Turkey could
    not be held responsible for the actions of a state that no longer
    existed, Professor Oran said.

    The conference, dealing with what has been described as the last taboo
    in Turkey, concluded in Istanbul Sunday, despite delegates having to
    run the gauntlet of nationalist protestors throwing eggs and tomatoes
    at them as they entered the conference hall at Bilgi University.

    The conference was staged even though on Friday an Istanbul court
    had imposed a ban on its being held. After the ruling by the court,
    deans of many of Turkey's universities said they would opposed the
    decision, saying it threatened the autonomy of their institutions.

    Addressing the conference on Sunday Professor Baskin Oran of Ankara
    University's Political Sciences Department said that the event had
    broken down the last taboo in Turkey. "Concept of class, criticisms
    of Ataturk, Cyprus, socialism, communism and Kurdistan are no more
    taboos in Turkey," he said. "There was only one taboo left, and it
    was Armenian issue. Now, it is no more a taboo."

    According to Associate Professor Taner Akcam, the leaders of the Party
    of Union and Progress had decided to remove those non Turkish-ethnic
    groups not of Turkish in the part of the Ottoman Empire that is
    now Turkey.

    "The Ittihat and Terakki Party (Party of Union & Progress) had a plan
    to purify whole Anatolia of the non-Turks, starting from the Aegean
    Region, before the World War I, and this plan was carried out in entire
    Anatolia during the years of the war," Taner told the conference.

    "Ottoman documents indicate that the decision to relocate the Armenians
    was made to end a deeper problem defined as the 'eastern problem'
    and to end the dissolution process of the Ottoman Empire.

    This decision was not a result of a need that erupted during the war.

    There are many documents in hand with respect to the destruction
    of Armenians."

    However, Dr Ahmet Kuyas of Galatasaray University said that the policy
    of relocation, decided upon by four of the leading figures in the
    Ittihat and Terakki Party, had had a darker side, with a series of
    massacres also taking place. Those responsible for these acts were
    the Minister of War Enver Pasa, Talat Pasa, Dr Bahattin Sakir and Dr
    Nazim, he said.

    A surprise speaker in the conference was Cevdet Aykan, formerly a
    minister from the long defunct right wing Justice Party (AP), who
    spoke on the Armenian community in the Tokat region in eastern Turkey,
    which he had covered in his published memoirs. According to Aykan,
    out of Tokat's population of 28,000 in the early years of the 20th
    century, 8,800 were Armenian. He said that in the census of 1924 the
    Armenian population was down to about 700.

    "It was not a good thing," he said "Thousands of Armenians lost their
    houses, country, homeland and some cases their lives," he said. Aykan
    said he had chosen to take part in the conference to repay debt
    of conscience. The events of 1915 were interpreted differently by
    different parliaments and that Turkey should not see the civilised
    world and those that run it as enemies, he said.

    Another delegate at the two day conference, Professor Dr Ilhan
    Cuhadaroglu, said that he felt a feeling of mourning at the conference
    that almost moved him to tears.

    "I feel like asking was I in Bulgaria or Greece," he said.
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