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Turks In Netherlands Reject Politics Over Armenian Issue

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  • Turks In Netherlands Reject Politics Over Armenian Issue

    TURKS IN NETHERLANDS REJECT POLITICS OVER ARMENIAN ISSUE

    Playfuls.com, Romania
    Oct 5 2006

    The large Turkish minority in the Netherlands is considering a boycott
    of the Dutch elections in November as a result of pressure on Turkish
    candidates to acknowledge that Armenians suffered genocide in 1915,
    the daily Volkskrant reported Thursday.

    "Many of the 400,000 Turks in the Netherlands regard themselves as
    no longer welcome and are turning their backs on politics," Sabri
    Kenan Bagci, chairman of the IOT organization that speaks for Turkish
    interests, told the daily Volkskrant.

    Bagci said he had called a national meeting of leading Turks in
    Utrecht on Sunday in response to a growing crisis over the issue
    within the community.

    Turkish candidates for the November 22 elections have come under
    pressure from their parties to publicly acknowledge the deaths of
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians during World War I as an act
    of genocide.

    The largest party in the Dutch parliament, the Christian Democrats
    (CDA), has pulled two Turkish candidates from its electoral list,
    while the main opposition Labour Party (PvdA) has dropped one.

    Over the weekend the CDA placed another Turk on its list, but was
    immediately accused of "tokenism."

    Talip Demirhan, who spent eight years on the CDA's management board,
    expressed his anger over the pressure on Turkish candidates.

    "We are being asked whether our great-grandfather was a mass
    murderer. If he was, then as far as I'm concerned he can go to hell,
    but why should I have to acknowledge responsibility to the average
    Dutch citizen," Demirhan, 63, told the Volkskrant.

    He poured scorn on the notion that this had to do with Dutch "norms
    and values."

    The issue is highly sensitive in Turkey itself. The European Parliament
    last week voted to withdraw a requirement that Turkey acknowledge the
    Armenian genocide as part of the conditions for Turkish membership
    of the European Union.

    Turkish public opinion has taken a keen interest in the controversy in
    the Netherlands, where official statistics put the number of residents
    of Turkish origin at 365,000 in a population of 16.3 million.
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