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  • ANKARA: Finnish President Halonen Refuses To Recognize ArmenianAlleg

    FINNISH PRESIDENT HALONEN REFUSES TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN ALLEGATIONS

    Journal of Turkish Weekly
    Sept 28 2005

    Kezban TUNCOVA, YEREVAN (JTW) During her visit to Armenia on Tuesday,
    Finland President Tarja Halonen found herself in the middle of
    a discussion on the sensitive issue of the so-called Armenian
    massacres. Armenians argue that the 1915 Relocation Decision of the
    Ottoman Empire was a genocide and Turkey should admit it. However
    Turkey has never accepted the allegations. Turkish historians say the
    1915 Relocation Campaign was a measure to prevent Armenian attacks
    against the Ottoman Army. The Armenians rioted against the Istanbul
    Government in order tyo establish their own state. More than 520,000
    Turkish people were massacred by the Armenian armed groups during
    the First World War.

    The discussion took place soon after the Finnish President had laid a
    wreath at a monument to the victims of the 1915 events in the Armenian
    capital Yerevan. Armenian journalists asked the Finnish President if
    she would publicly recognise the 1915 events as a genocide.

    Finnish President Halonen avoided a direct response to the questions,
    saying instead "We are building a common future with Armenia".

    According to the President, Finland is not in the habit of giving
    recognition to historical events. She said that every generation has
    the right to re-examine history, and every country has a right to its
    own history. She added that countries should not become prisoners of
    history. Similarly Turkish prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan had called the
    Armenian side to establish a joint committee to discuss the historical
    disputes between Turkey and Armenia. However the Armenian FM Oskanian
    rejected the offer. Turkey also says both countries should focus on
    today and current problems instead of obsessively focusing on the
    past. Dr. Sedat Laciner from Ankara based Turkish think-tank USAK -
    ISRO (International Strategic Research Organization) said "we should
    not sacrifice today for the past. Both sides made mistakes in the
    past and we cannot change the history. But we can construct the
    future together".

    Finnish package tours to Armenia have already begun this year.

    Currently, a fifth fairly small group of Finnish tourists are in
    Yerevan.

    On Tuesday President Halonen held talks with Armenian President Robert
    Kochharian and other politicians on trade, Armenian-Turkish relations,
    the dispute over the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as Turkey's
    possible membership in the European Union.

    The same issues came up when Halonen, who received an honorary
    doctorate, spoke to students at Yerevan State University. The Finnish
    President defended Turkish EU membership, which Armenia opposes,
    because of Turkey's support for Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh
    issue. She said that Turkish EU membership would benefit the whole
    region, including Armenia. On the question of Nagorno-Karabakh - an
    ethnically Armenian enclave inside Azerbaijan - Halonen offered the
    autonomous status of Finland's Åland Islands as a model. A fiery-eyed
    student responded: "Azerbaijan is not Sweden".

    Armenia has occupied almost 20 percent of Azerbaijani territories
    for more than a decade and the EU and the OSCE named Armenia as
    'occupier' in the Karabakh. Armenia also does not recognize Turkey's
    and Azerbaijan's national borders.

    Dr. Davut Sahiner from ISRO told to the JTW that Turkey's EU membership
    will be very usefull in solving the regional problems in the region:

    "The old order has to be changed in the Caucasus. The economical
    and political structure of the Caucaus should be integrated into the
    European and Western systems. And an EU member-Turkey could play a
    vital role in doing so. Armenia right now has border problems and the
    irredentist Armenian groups manipulate the Armenian politics. Turkey,
    Georgia, Azerbaijain and Armenia should integrate their economies.

    However the Karabakh issue prevent any development. As the EU and
    the US urge the Yerevan, Armenia should withdraw from the occupied
    territories."

    --Boundary_(ID_YIjAZCKDOJbJwGinXZfn9Q)--
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