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ANKARA: Armenian Intellectuals Send 'Genocide' Letter To Gul

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  • ANKARA: Armenian Intellectuals Send 'Genocide' Letter To Gul

    ARMENIAN INTELLECTUALS SEND 'GENOCIDE' LETTER TO GUL

    Today's Zaman
    Dec 12 2008
    Turkey

    A group of Armenian intellectuals have urged President Abdullah Gul to
    recognize Armenian allegations of genocide, suggesting that such a move
    would remove "a burden of history" resting on the shoulders of Turks.

    The letter, signed by around 300 intellectuals according to Armenian
    news reports, praised Gul for breaking a Turkish foreign policy taboo
    by visiting Armenia to watch a soccer game in early September between
    the national soccer teams of the two countries in the World Cup. The
    visit paved the way for contacts between Turkey and Armenia, which
    have had no formal ties since 1993.

    The visit "proved that normalization of neighbor relations demand bold
    and realistic action. It specifically refers to the Armenian Genocide
    issue, which has divided the two nations since 1915," the letter was
    quoted as saying in a report by www.panarmenian.net earlier this week.

    "Mr. President, it is an outrageous crime against the humanity which
    has no time limitation. Its recognition is not a demand of the Armenian
    people but a just expectation of the international community. The
    Armenian Genocide is a crime against the values of modern civilization,
    a crime that can't be questioned. We all should accept that the
    Ottoman Empire is guilty of the massacre of the Armenian people,
    and modern-day Turkey bears hereditary responsibility for what they
    consider a monumental crime against humanity. Present-day Turkish
    diplomacy and propaganda machine can't cover this dark page of
    history," the letter continued.

    "The historic memory of our nations is deep and restless. Your
    generation of Turkish leaders must accept the undeniable truth
    and recognize the fact of the Armenian Genocide. Recognition of
    this indisputable fact is first of all essential for the Turkish
    people. Relieving this burden of history, they can turn this dark
    page and launch a sincere dialogue for true reconciliation," it
    said. "Your visit to Armenia inspires hope for a new and realistic
    political course in Turkey. However, these efforts can fail of your
    state doesn't take action to put an end to the current policy of the
    Armenian Genocide denial."

    The move from the Armenian intellectuals came days after a group
    of Turkish intellectuals apologized for the "great disaster that
    Ottoman Armenians suffered in 1915." A petition initiated by a group
    of intellectuals, including professors Baskın Oran and Ahmet İnsel
    and journalists Ali Bayramoglu and Cengiz Aktar, personally apologizes
    for the events.

    Turkey severed its diplomatic ties with Armenia and closed its border
    in 1993 in protest of the Armenian occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh
    in Azerbaijan. Ankara says the normalization of its relations with
    Armenia depends on Armenia's withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh and an
    end to Yerevan's support for the Armenian diaspora's efforts to win
    international recognition for claims that Armenians were subjected to
    genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. But Gul's September visit
    broke the ice between the two countries. Officials have had talks on
    the possible normalization of relations since that historic visit.

    --Boundary_(ID_uaKMxIXHii3Xeiqjw1T7kw)--
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