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  • Ottawa To Soothe Turks Angry Over 'Genocide' Tag

    OTTAWA TO SOOTHE TURKS ANGRY OVER 'GENOCIDE' TAG
    Brian Laghi - Ottawa Bureau Chief

    Globe and Mail, Canada
    Oct 25 2006

    The federal government has moved to mend fences with Turkey by
    qualifying its support for a controversial declaration that the Turks
    perpetrated a genocide against Armenians during the First World War.

    The move comes just months after Turkey agreed to take in thousands
    of Canadians stranded in strife-torn Lebanon and after the Turks
    protested diplomatically by temporarily removing their ambassador
    and then pulling out of air exercises taking place in Alberta earlier
    this summer.

    Canada and Turkey are both members of NATO and each are contributing
    soldiers to the war in Afghanistan.

    In a brief address at the home of the Turkish ambassador last week,
    Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay thanked Turkey for taking in
    the Canadians and then added that Canada supports a Turkish plan to
    convene an academic panel to study the events of 1915.

    Print Edition - Section Front Enlarge Image

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    World section The government is in the position of apparently both
    recognizing the events as a genocide and of calling for a study to
    examine the issue.

    Backing the idea for a panel runs counter to the adoption of a
    resolution by Prime Minister Stephen Harper earlier this year when it
    affirmed a two-year-old House of Commons vote to condemn the brutal
    treatment of the Armenians. That move was championed by Mr. Harper's
    parliamentary secretary, Jason Kenney, and earned the government
    plaudits within the Armenian community.

    "The Canadian government supports the Turkish government's practical
    proposal to establish a joint committee comprised of Turkish and
    Armenian historians as well as historians from a third country to look
    into the events of 1915, and encourages the Government of Armenia
    to participate in this committee," said Mr. MacKay, according to a
    transcript provided to The Globe and Mail.

    It is unclear what prompted the shift, although Canada and Turkey are
    traditional allies and Turkey's proximity to the Middle East is seen
    as strategically important to the West.

    An official speaking on behalf of Mr. MacKay confirmed that the
    minister supports the idea of a panel. "Minister MacKay endorses
    an independent study of the events of 1915, with third-party
    participation, in order for all possible facts to be looked at,"
    Dan Dugas said.

    About two dozen other countries have recognized the deaths of 1.5
    million Armenians during the First World War as a genocide, while
    Turkey maintains the deaths were caused by civil strife, diseases
    and famine. At the time, Armenia was under Turkish Ottoman control.

    An official with the Turkish embassy said the move is a welcome
    development. "Genocide is a very serious accusation," Yonet Tezel said.

    "Turkey's proposal aims to narrow the gap between the two sides
    by allowing historians and experts to work together and, more
    importantly, reach conclusions based on their research in all the
    relevant archives."

    However, an official with the Armenian embassy said the Canadian
    issue is settled, as far as Armenia is concerned.

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet /story/LAC.20061025.TURKS25/TPStory/TPInternationa l/Africa/
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