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BEIRUT: Turkish Peacekeepers Arrive For Mission In South

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  • BEIRUT: Turkish Peacekeepers Arrive For Mission In South

    TURKISH PEACEKEEPERS ARRIVE FOR MISSION IN SOUTH
    by Daily Star staff

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    Oct 21 2006

    Deployment comes despite vocal opposition from armenian community

    Around 260 Turkish soldiers arrived in Lebanon on Friday, the first
    Muslim land forces to join UN peacekeepers monitoring a cease-fire
    between Israel and Lebanon. Two ships carrying 95 personnel and 46
    vehicles docked at Beirut Port, officials said. Some 160 more troops
    flew to Beirut's airport a short time later.

    The first Turkish deployment in Lebanon since the Ottomans left in
    1918, shortly before their empire collapsed at the end of World War I,
    the troops will be stationed in the village of Shaatit, 7.5 kilometers
    from the Southern port of Tyre.

    But their arrival comes despite vocal opposition from Lebanon's
    Armenian community, which accuses the Turks' Ottoman ancestors of
    genocide.

    Turkey, a key regional ally of Israel, is the first Muslim country
    to contribute troops to the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL)
    that will eventually number 15,000 men.

    Muslim nations Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia and Qatar have also
    pledged soldiers to the planned 15,000-strong force, but they have
    yet to arrive.

    A small advance team of engineers, who are due to work mostly on the
    reconstruction of roads and bridges as well as de-mining, arrived on
    October 10 but Turkey is not expected to contribute any more ground
    troops to the UN force.

    The Turkish government has said it will contribute a total of 681
    troops.

    A Turkish frigate is already serving in the German-led naval task
    force patrolling the Lebanese coast to prevent arms being smuggled
    to Hizbullah, and the navy has said it will also send two corvettes.

    Members of Lebanon's 140,000-strong Armenian community have staged
    several demonstrations in protest at the troop deployment because
    Turkey refuses to recognize the 1915-17 massacres of Armenians by
    the Ottomans as genocide.

    But the Armenians are not expected to mount further protests, despite
    accusations Turkey is seeking to establish a "new Ottoman empire."

    "Their return is for economic reasons and to revive their dream of
    a new Ottoman empire in the Middle East," said Armenian-Lebanese
    MP Hagop Pakradounian. "We don't understand why the government is
    enthusiastic for the Turks to come."

    But a fellow Armenian-Lebanese MP, Hagop Kassarjian, said the community
    had to accept the facts on the ground.

    "Even though we're Armenian and we've protested, we're Lebanese after
    all. We did what we have to do but the Lebanese government has taken
    a decision and so has the international community," he said.
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