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Turkish PM Says He Won't Apology To Armenians

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  • Turkish PM Says He Won't Apology To Armenians

    TURKISH PM SAYS HE WON'T APOLOGY TO ARMENIANS
    By Selcan Hacaoglu

    AP
    17 Dec 08

    ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -- Turkey's prime minister on Wednesday said he
    will not join a group of Turkish intellectuals who issued an apology on
    the Internet for the World War I-era massacres of Armenians in Turkey.

    "If there is a crime, then those who committed it can offer an
    apology. My nation, my country has no such issue," Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan said. "I personally do not support this campaign."

    The Turkish prime minister's reaction, echoed by nationalists and even
    members of opposition parties, was a setback for the intellectuals'
    hopes to nurture reconciliation by shattering a taboo against
    acknowledging Turkish culpability for the deaths.

    Several Turkish diplomats and lawmakers have condemned the apology
    and hundreds of Turks joined groups that popped up on Facebook with
    titles such as "I am not apologizing."

    Erdogan said the apology issued Monday threatens to damage improved
    relations and is not binding.

    "This initiative jeopardizes Turkey's Armenia policy because it could
    trigger public pressure and polarization within Turkey," Erdal Safak,
    a columnist for daily Sabah newspaper, wrote in Wednesday editions.

    Turkey has opened an air corridor to the landlocked country and
    renovated a historic Armenian church. The Foreign Ministry on Wednesday
    said Turkey's archives were open to researchers studying a chapter
    of history that has pois oned relations between the two countries.

    Turkey's President Abdullah Gul visited Armenia in September to watch
    a World Cup qualifying match as a goodwill gesture.

    Despite diplomatic overtures, the two countries have failed to
    establish a commission of historians to examine Turkish and Armenian
    archives and to share their findings with the public.

    Armenia and Turkey do not have diplomatic relations because of
    the dispute over the killings of Armenians during World War I,
    which Armenians claim was genocide. Their shared border has been
    closed since 1993, when Turkey protested Armenia's occupation of
    Nagorno-Karabakh. Turkey backs Azerbaijan's claims to the disputed
    region, which has a high number of ethnic Armenian residents but is
    located within Azerbaijan's borders.

    Historians estimate up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman
    Turks around the time of World War I, an event widely viewed by
    genocide scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey,
    however, denies the deaths constituted genocide, saying that the
    toll has been inflated and that those killed were victims of civil
    war and unrest.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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