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More Than 11,000 Turks Apologise For Armenian Deaths

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  • More Than 11,000 Turks Apologise For Armenian Deaths

    MORE THAN 11,000 TURKS APOLOGISE FOR ARMENIAN DEATHS

    Agence France Presse
    December 17, 2008 Wednesday

    More than 11,000 Turks have signed an Internet petition that apologises
    to Armenians for massacres that took place in 1915, in an unprecedented
    move that has sparked fierce criticism.

    The petition -- drafted by a group of university professors and
    coinciding with a time of warming relations between arch-foes
    Ankara and Yerevan -- relates to events nearly a century ago in the
    then-Ottoman Empire.

    The text of the petition states that signatories regret "that we
    remain indifferent to the Great Catastrophe that Ottoman Armenians
    endured... and that we deny," and offers apologies.

    University professor Cengiz Aktar, a founder of the campaign for
    signatures launched on the Internet Tuesday and which has been endorsed
    by intellectuals and artists, hailed the effort a success.

    He said he sensed that there were "many people" in Turkey who shared
    his opinion of what happened. "I was right," he said.

    Armenia and Turkey offer starkly different accounts of those events,
    and the dispute has been a major obstacle in relations between the
    two countries.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died between 1915
    and 1917 in orchestrated killings during the final years of the
    Ottoman Empire.

    But Turkey rejects the genocide label and argues that between 300,000
    and 500,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife.

    Significantly, the petition does not use the word "genocide" --
    a move that in Turkey could possibly lead to legal proceedings.

    It has nethertheless drawn the ire of politicians, diplomats and even
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose government is trying to
    normalise relations with Yerevan.

    "I don't accept this campaign, I will not support it and I will not
    take part in it," Erdogan told reporters in remarks cited by Anatolia
    news agency.

    More than 20 countries, including Belgium, Canada, Poland and
    Switzerland, have officially recognised the killings as genocide.

    But many others, including Britain and the United States, refuse to
    use the term to describe the events, mindful of relations with Turkey.
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