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  • ANKARA: State says `no' to apology campaign

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Dec 20 2008


    State says `no' to apology campaign


    The speaker of parliament, the foreign minister and the chief of
    general staff added their voice yesterday to Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip ErdoÄ?an's disapproval of a campaign initiated by several
    intellectuals to apologize for the events of 1915 -- which Armenians
    claim constituted genocide.

    The officials decried the intellectuals personally apologizing to the
    Armenians, with only President Abdullah Gül taking a different
    stance when he suggested that the fact that Turkey can discuss issues
    such as this is evidence of a healthy society.

    Parliament Speaker Köksal Toptan said the campaign is an unjust
    act against Turkey. "Those signing it first condemn Turkey and later
    apologize for this condemnation," he said, adding that Turkish
    diplomats have been killed by Armenian terrorist organizations. "Who
    will apologize for their deaths? This is why I think it would be
    better to not have this campaign," he said.

    Toptan added that since 2005 Turkey has had a state policy regarding
    the claims and that this policy suggests establishing a joint
    committee of historians to research the claims.

    Brig. Gen. Metin Gürak, the head of the General Staff's
    communications department, yesterday in a regular press meeting
    described the campaign as "definitely not right." "Apologizing is not
    only wrong, it is behavior that can produce harmful results," he said
    in response to a question.

    Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said in Brussels that the
    campaign may negatively affect Turkish-Armenian dialogue
    efforts. Babacan also underlined that he is particularly very
    sensitive about the issue since his ministry lost many diplomats in
    attacks carried out by Armenian terrorist groups. The Turkish-Armenian
    dialogue Babacan referred to is known to include regular, but closed,
    meetings between Armenia and Turkey and a recent visit by President
    Gül to Yerevan upon the invitation of his Armenian counterpart,
    Serzh Sarksyan, to watch the World Cup qualifying game between the two
    countries' national soccer teams.

    In addition to the official condemnation and criticism, the campaign
    received a further blow following allegations that signatures
    collected over the Internet are either fake or intentionally forged.

    The AkÅ?am daily yesterday claimed that former Turkish
    Ambassador to France Ä°smail Erez, assassinated in 1975 together
    with his driver by the Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of
    Armenia (ASALA) terrorist organization, is on the list of those who
    apologized. The list of people supporting the campaign has been
    inaccessible as of yesterday. It had previously been posted on the Web
    site of the campaign, www.ozurdiliyoruz.com. In another case, a state
    official complained that his name was added to the list of signatories
    without his consent and said that he intends to file a lawsuit against
    the campaigners.

    Speaking to Today's Zaman yesterday, one of the campaign organizers,
    who asked to not be named, said the Web site has been under
    attack. The source claimed that the attackers used three methods to
    attack the site, with one being unstoppable.

    "The first method was to sign with wrong names deliberately like that
    of late Mr. Erez; the second one to sign it with real names in order
    to open a court case later. For these two, we are trying to use some
    filtering mechanisms but the third one which is impossible to cope
    with, that is, sending millions of messages to the address within
    seconds and to make it impossible for others to reach the site. On
    Thursday our site was practically unreachable due to such an attack,"
    he said.

    Financial Times claimed yesterday that the computer which was sending
    these intensive messages is in the Ministry of Interior. But the IT
    experts say that hackers may be mirroring the IP address of the
    Ministry of Interior or using a computer in the Ministry through a
    Trojan they deployed into the computer.

    Criticism towards the campaigners was endorsed by opposition parties,
    unions and universities also. Echoing Nationalist Movement Party (MHP)
    leader Devlet Bahçeli's Thursday remarks that he is ashamed of
    the campaigners, Muhsin YazıcıoÄ?lu, the chairman
    of the Great Union Party (BBP) condemned the campaign and initiators
    of it. "I am condemning those handicaps [özürlü]
    that started to this apology [özür] campaign", he said.

    He added hat he does not consider the intellectuals who initiated the
    campaign as real intellectuals: "Every move of them is to defame
    history and support everything against Turkishness," he said.

    Because of the campaign the number of those who are suggesting that
    Armenians are the ones who have to be apologizing is increasing,
    too. The chairman of Union of State Servants (Memur-Sen) who met with
    YazıcıoÄ?lu yesterday said that "If there is
    something for apologizing for; there are the diplomats killed by
    Armenians and the Azerbaijan territory that is still under
    occupation."

    Another union leader, the leader of the Public Servants Union
    (Kamu-Sen) Bircan Akyıldız opposed the campaign and said
    that "Turkish Republic is always under attack openly or indirectly by
    cooperatives who have been sold."

    He made this statement on behalf of a platform which is called as
    "Turkish Solidarity Council," an umbrella organization of 96
    establishment including Ankara Trade Chamber, Union of
    Agriculturalists and Turkey Workers Union (Turk-Ä°Å?).

    Not only some unions but establishments like Atatürk University
    Senate opposed to the campaign also. The final declaration of the
    extraordinary meeting of the University's Senate was announced in the
    Yanıkdere Martyrs' Graveyard, where Turks who are allegedly
    killed by Armenians are buried.

    The President of the University Hikmet Koçak read the
    declaration personally and claimed that only radical Armenians are
    thinking that the campaign is brave and intellectual. "This campaign
    is not only a very big disrespectful act against the Turkish nation
    but also a betrayal to our martyrs who lost their lives in Armenian
    terror," the President of University suggested.

    Meanwhile the family of President Abdullah Gül declared
    yesterday that they are investigating the possibility of going to the
    court against the remarks of Republican People's Party (CHP)
    İzmir deputy Canan Arıtman's allegations about the
    maternal family roots of President Gül. President's brother
    Macit Gül said that there is no court case opened for the time
    being but they will weigh the option after receiving the advices of
    their lawyers. Criticizing President Gül's sympathetic remarks
    about the campaign Arıtman claimed that the reason of
    President's sympathy would be understood if his maternal roots were
    investigated.

    Commenting on Arıtman's hint that the President have Armenian
    roots, the President of the Parliament Toptan said that he found these
    remarks "extremely wrong and shameful". CHP leader Deniz Baykal said,
    yesterday, that the remarks of Arıtman are not binding for them
    or the party.

    "My conscience does not accept the insensitivity showed to and the
    denial of the Great Catastrophe that Ottoman Armenians were subjected
    to in 1915. I reject this injustice and for my part, I empathize with
    the feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers. I apologize to them,"
    the campaign statement that aroused a heated discussion read.




    20 December 2008, Saturday
    AYÅ?E KARABAT ANKARA
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