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ANKARA: Turkey Slams Argentinian Statement On Armenian Claims

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  • ANKARA: Turkey Slams Argentinian Statement On Armenian Claims

    TURKEY SLAMS ARGENTINIAN STATEMENT ON ARMENIAN CLAIMS

    Hurriyet, Turkey
    April 25 2008

    A Turkish foreign ministry spokesman said on Friday necessary
    initiatives were underway pertaining to the new text adopted by the
    Argentine Senate supporting Armenian allegations regarding the 1915
    events, the Anatolian Agency reported.

    "The Argentine Senate has approved a new text supporting the baseless
    Armenian allegations... (which) we strongly condemn and fully reject,"
    the foreign ministry said.

    The spokesman said Turkish State Minister Mehmet Aydin cancelled his
    visit to Argentina following this adoption of the resolution.

    Aydin has been scheduled to travel to Buenos Aires on April 28-29 for a
    gathering of the U.N.-sponsored Alliance of Civilizations initiative,
    which aims to foster dialogue between Islamic and Western societies
    and is co-chaired by Spain and Turkey.

    "Decision of the Argentina Senate contradicts historical facts and
    violates principles of international law," Turkish foreign ministry
    spokesman said.

    The newly elected Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian vowed on Thursday
    to redouble efforts to have the 1915 events recognised as "genocide",
    AFP reported.

    Armenia, with the backing of the diaspora, claims up to 1.5 million
    of their kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings during the
    last years of the Ottoman Empire. Turkey rejects the claims, saying
    that 300,000 Armenians along with at least as many Turks died in civil
    strife that emerged when the Armenians took up arms for independence
    in eastern Anatolia.

    Turkey is of the view that parliaments and other political institutions
    are not the appropriate forums to debate and pass judgment on
    disputed periods of history. Past events and controversial periods
    of history should be left to historians for their dispassionate study
    and evaluation.

    In 2005, Turkey has officially proposed the establishment of a joint
    commission comprised of historians and other experts from both sides
    to study the events of 1915, utilizing not only Turkish and Armenian
    archives, but also those of relevant third-party countries and to share
    their findings with the public. Armenia has not responded positively
    to this initiative, as yet.

    The parliaments of Argentina, Belgium, France, Netherlands,
    Switzerland, Italy, Canada, Lebanon, the Russian Federation, Slovakia,
    Uruguay, Greece, the Greek Cypriot administration, Poland, Germany,
    Lithuania, Chile, Venezuela and the European Parliament passed either
    resolutions or issued statements on the events. In addition, some
    local parliaments in the U.S., Canada, Britain, Australia, Argentina
    and Switzerland passed similar resolutions.
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