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Helsinki: Halonen in ROA asked for recognition of Turkish massacre

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  • Helsinki: Halonen in ROA asked for recognition of Turkish massacre

    Helsingin Sanomat, Finland
    Sept 28 2005

    Halonen in Armenia asked for recognition of Turkish massacre

    President avoids question by focusing on future


    During her visit to Armenia on Tuesday, President Tarja Halonen found
    herself in the middle of a discussion on the sensitive issue of the
    Turkish massacre of more than a million Armenians during the First
    World War and shortly thereafter.
    The discussion took place soon after the Finnish President had
    laid a wreath at a monument to the victims of the genocide in the
    Armenian capital Yerevan.
    Armenian journalists asked the Finnish President if she would
    publicly recognise the events as a genocide. A number of countries,
    including France, have already done so.
    Turkey has refused to andmit that a genocide had taken
    place,and this refusal is one factor which has helped inflame
    relations between Armenia and Turkey; their border is closed off, and
    there are no diplomatic ties between the two countries.

    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.
    The laying of the wreath at the monument could be seen as a
    recognition of sorts. However, many other state visitors to Armenia
    do the same.
    The protocol also calls for the planting of a tree at the
    memorial. Halonen's silver fir went up near trees planted by Vladimir
    Putin and Lech Walesa.

    "Where's the minister?" Halonen asked in the middle of the
    tree-planting, calling on the Minister of Trade and Industry Mauri
    Pekkarinen to grab the shovel and start digging.
    Earlier during the trip Pekkarinen had complained that he had
    little to do in the President's entourage. On Tuesday there was no
    such problem, because Halonen kept him busy all day.
    For instance, in the middle of a press conference of the
    Finnish and Armenian leaders, Halonen unexpectedly asked Pekkarinen
    to brief the journalists on prospects for economic cooperation
    between the two countries.
    Two sectors seen by Pekkarinen as worthy of development were
    mining and tourism.

    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".

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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