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Turkish, Foreign Academics Debate WWI Armenian Massacres

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  • Turkish, Foreign Academics Debate WWI Armenian Massacres

    TURKISH, FOREIGN ACADEMICS DEBATE WWI ARMENIAN MASSACRES

    Middle East Times, Egypt
    March 15 2006

    ISTANBUL -- Some 70 Turkish and foreign academics gathered in
    Istanbul on Wednesday for a three-day conference to discuss whether
    the controversial massacres of Armenians during World War I amounted
    to genocide or not.

    In a rare move, the gathering, organized by the Istanbul state
    university, offered the floor to academics of all convictions even
    though it was largely dominated by historians and officials who defend
    Turkey's official position on the 1915-17 killings.

    Turkey categorically denies that Armenian subjects under its
    predecessor, the Ottoman Empire, were victims of a genocide, but
    acknowledges that at least 300,000 Armenians and as many Turks died
    in civil strife during the last years of the empire.

    Armenians claim that up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered
    in orchestrated killings.

    In the first session of the conference, Yair Auron, an Israeli
    researcher of Jewish archives from Ottoman times, openly used the term
    "genocide" and appealed on Turks to question their past.

    "Every civil society has to deal with its past, including the black
    pages of this past," Auron said.

    Books detailing the Armenian claims were also available at the entrance
    to the conference hall in a rare move.

    Turkey has only recently begun to openly discuss the taboo subject
    of the Armenian massacres, which many countries have recognized
    as genocide.

    In September last year a private Istanbul university hosted a landmark
    conference organized by intellectuals disputing Ankara's official
    line on the mass killings, despite a court order to block it.
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