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Turkey recalls envoys over Armenian genocide

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  • Turkey recalls envoys over Armenian genocide

    Turkey recalls envoys over Armenian genocide

    CTV.ca News Staff
    05/08/2006

    Turkey has recalled its envoys to Canada and France in protest of a decision
    by both countries to recognize the massacres of hundreds of thousands of
    Armenians during the early 20th century as genocide.
    Osman Korutuk, Turkey's ambassador to France, and Aydemir Erman, the
    ambassador in Ottawa, will be recalled "for a short time for consultations
    over the latest developments about the baseless allegations of Armenian
    genocide," in the two countries, said Turkey's Foreign Ministry spokesman
    Namik Tan.
    They will return to their posts following the consultations, he added.
    The move comes amid mounting international pressure for Ankara to recognize
    the deaths of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians during 1915 and 1923, as
    genocide
    The trial came at a particularly sensitive time for the nation, which
    recently joined EU membership talks and continues to draw criticism for
    human rights and laws that stifle freedom of speech.
    The European Union has said Turkey's bid to seek membership could be
    hindered by the claims of genocide.
    Both the International Center for Transitional Justice and the Association
    of Genocide Scholars have recognized the massacre as genocide, as has the
    United Nations Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection
    of Minorities.
    In 1985, the UN agency listed cases of genocide in the 20th century, among
    those "the Ottoman massacre of Armenians in 1915-1916."
    But Turkey has long upheld a position of denial, saying the mass killings
    were not a systemic genocide, but part of broader ethnic clashes as
    Armenians sided with Russia during the First World War.
    Turkey recently criticized Prime Minister Stephen Harper after he said his
    government continued to recognize motions adopted by the Canadian senate and
    parliament acknowledging that the genocide took place.
    Canada recognized the genocide in a 2004 private member's bill in the House
    of Commons.
    Turkey has also recently warned France not to pass a draft law which would
    make denial of the Armenian genocide a crime subject to a one-year jail term
    and a 45,000-euro (More than $63,000 Cdn) fine.
    When French legislators formally recognized the Armenian genocide in 2001,
    Turkey cancelled millions of dollars worth of defence contracts.
    The Turkish news media have also speculated that Canadian and French
    companies would be barred from bidding on the construction of a planned
    nuclear power plant which Turkey hopes to build in the Black Sea coastal
    town of Sinop.
    Several other countries, including Argentina, Poland, and Russia, have
    declared the killings a genocide, and there is strong pressure from
    Armenians worldwide for the U.S. Congress to recognize the massacres as
    genocide as well.
    In the past few years, a few lone Turkish voices have joined international
    critics in condemnation of Ankara's position.
    The country's best-known and internationally acclaimed novelist Orhan Pamuk
    went on trial on charges of insulting his country's national character after
    he told a Swiss newspaper that Turkey was unwilling to deal with two of the
    most painful episodes in its recent history: the massacre of Armenians and
    recent guerrilla fighting in Turkey's overwhelmingly Kurdish southeast.
    In January, a Turkish court dropped those criminal charges against Pamuk,
    who is an often-mentioned candidate for the Nobel Prize in literature, but
    the nationalist lawyer who pushed for the trial has said he would appeal the
    court decision.
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