Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Turkish MPs Announce 'Shame List'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Turkish MPs Announce 'Shame List'

    TURKISH MPS ANNOUNCE 'SHAME LIST'
    By Cihan News Agency

    Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 24 2006

    On Thursday, the Turkish parliament took a new step in condemnation
    of the French parliament's acceptance of a bill criminalizing any
    denial of an Armenian genocide.

    It compiled a "shame list" of massacres committed by European
    countries, including France, Germany and the Netherlands.

    The necessary study for the list was conducted by the parliament's
    justice sub-committee as part of its debates over a bill that would
    recognize the Algerian genocide committed by France.

    The commission is researching the past massacres and tyrannies of
    countries that accept the Armenian genocide.

    The members of the commission listened to Turkish History Society
    President Professor Yusuf Halacoglu and decided that announcing the
    European list to the world would be more efficient than recognition
    of an Algerian genocide.

    In this context, the commission requested that the Turkish History
    Society and foreign affairs department carry out extensive studies
    into the history of countries recognizing an Armenian genocide.

    The "shame list" is expected to be announced following the Ramadan
    holiday.

    Deputy Mustafa Nuri Akbulut announced that the parliament would
    publish the list rather than recognize an Algerian genocide.

    Akbulut also asserted that this study would enable the international
    community to better see the objective attitude of the Turkish
    parliament and added human rights, freedom of speech and the process
    that this method was subject to would be discussed extensively in
    the document.

    Justice and Development Party (AKP) deputy Akbulut also said the
    document would include a text that will explain the circumstances
    under which Turkey decided to deport Armenians in 1915.

    Akbulut noted that while Ottoman soldiers were deployed in the
    Dardanelles and the Caucasus during World War I, Armenians committed
    massacres in Anatolia and betrayed Ottomans.

    France, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, Sweden, Poland, Belgium,
    Slovakia, Greece, Latvia and Greek Cyprus have all made decisions
    so far about an Armenian Genocide in different years, and some have
    issued declarations and reports on the issue.

    For further information please visit http://www.cihannews.com

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X