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Dutch Political Parties Scrap Candidates Who Deny WWI Massacre Of Ar

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  • Dutch Political Parties Scrap Candidates Who Deny WWI Massacre Of Ar

    DUTCH POLITICAL PARTIES SCRAP CANDIDATES WHO DENY WWI MASSACRE OF ARMENIANS WAS GENOCIDE

    International Herald Tribune, France
    The Associated Press
    Sept 27 2006

    AMSTERDAM, Netherlands The two largest Dutch political parties
    have scrapped ethnic Turkish parliamentary candidates who refuse to
    acknowledge the mass killings of Armenians during World War I amounted
    to genocide.

    The candidates include Ayhan Tonca of the governing Christian Democrat
    Party. Tonca is one of the country's most prominent Muslim politicians
    and is chairman of an umbrella organization of Islamic groups known
    as CMO.

    The Christian Democrats also retracted the candidacy of Osman Elmaci,
    and the opposition Labor Party ended the candidacy of Erdinc Sacan.

    In their platforms ahead of next month's election, both parties have
    staked out positions on Turkey's possible entry into the European
    Union, a divisive issue around the continent.

    The Labor Party has adopted a view shared by others in Europe that
    Turkey should be required to recognize the killings as genocide before
    it can be allowed to join the EU.

    Whether the mass killings of a million or more Armenians in the last
    years of the Ottoman Empire nearly a century ago constituted a genocide
    has been the subject of academic and political debate.

    The Netherlands and most European governments consider it a genocide.

    Turkey and many Turkish scholars, and others, vehemently deny the
    deaths resulted from systematic slaughter, saying the death toll of
    1.5 million is wildly inflated and that both Armenians and Turks were
    killed in fighting during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

    The U.S. government has shied away from using the word "genocide"
    to define the killings.

    Earlier this month the European Parliament voted for the inclusion
    of a clause requiring Turkey "to recognize the Armenian genocide as
    a condition for its EU accession."

    Though their parliamentary runs were ended, the three politicians were
    not expelled from their parties. None could immediately be reached
    for comment Wednesday.

    Tonca and Elmaci had initially said they would assent to the Christian
    Democrat Party's official position acknowledging the killings as
    genocide, but both later denied they shared that view in an interview
    with a Turkish newspaper.

    "As a result of an interview in the Turkish paper Sabah, a discussion
    took place between the party and Mr. Elmaci and Mr. Tonca," the
    CDA said in a statement. "In this discussion it was determined that
    there is a structural difference of opinion over recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide."

    It said the men would not be candidates and thanked them for their
    services.

    Labor's Sacan had never accepted his party's position accepting the
    genocide as a fact.

    AMSTERDAM, Netherlands The two largest Dutch political parties
    have scrapped ethnic Turkish parliamentary candidates who refuse to
    acknowledge the mass killings of Armenians during World War I amounted
    to genocide.

    The candidates include Ayhan Tonca of the governing Christian Democrat
    Party. Tonca is one of the country's most prominent Muslim politicians
    and is chairman of an umbrella organization of Islamic groups known
    as CMO.

    The Christian Democrats also retracted the candidacy of Osman Elmaci,
    and the opposition Labor Party ended the candidacy of Erdinc Sacan.

    In their platforms ahead of next month's election, both parties have
    staked out positions on Turkey's possible entry into the European
    Union, a divisive issue around the continent.

    The Labor Party has adopted a view shared by others in Europe that
    Turkey should be required to recognize the killings as genocide before
    it can be allowed to join the EU.

    Whether the mass killings of a million or more Armenians in the last
    years of the Ottoman Empire nearly a century ago constituted a genocide
    has been the subject of academic and political debate.

    The Netherlands and most European governments consider it a genocide.

    Turkey and many Turkish scholars, and others, vehemently deny the
    deaths resulted from systematic slaughter, saying the death toll of
    1.5 million is wildly inflated and that both Armenians and Turks were
    killed in fighting during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

    The U.S. government has shied away from using the word "genocide"
    to define the killings.

    Earlier this month the European Parliament voted for the inclusion
    of a clause requiring Turkey "to recognize the Armenian genocide as
    a condition for its EU accession."

    Though their parliamentary runs were ended, the three politicians were
    not expelled from their parties. None could immediately be reached
    for comment Wednesday.

    Tonca and Elmaci had initially said they would assent to the Christian
    Democrat Party's official position acknowledging the killings as
    genocide, but both later denied they shared that view in an interview
    with a Turkish newspaper.

    "As a result of an interview in the Turkish paper Sabah, a discussion
    took place between the party and Mr. Elmaci and Mr. Tonca," the
    CDA said in a statement. "In this discussion it was determined that
    there is a structural difference of opinion over recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide."

    It said the men would not be candidates and thanked them for their
    services.

    Labor's Sacan had never accepted his party's position accepting the
    genocide as a fact.
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