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  • ANKARA: CHP Deputy Sticks To Stance Despite Criticism

    CHP DEPUTY STICKS TO STANCE DESPITE CRITICISM

    Hurriyet
    Dec 22 2008
    Turkey

    ANKARA - President Gul hails the apology initiative as proof of
    Turkey's democratic health, while Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    the military and the CHP oppose the campaign, saying the consequences
    will be harmful

    Despite a written warning from her party, the Republican People's
    Party, or CHP, deputy Canan Arıtman has decided to move ahead with
    controversial claims over the weekend concerning alleged Armenian
    roots of the president.

    "If I had seen the president, I would have hurled a shoe at him,"
    Arıtman was quoted as saying, referring to the recent protest of
    the Iraqi journalist who threw his shoe at outgoing U.S. President
    George W. Bush.

    In protest of President Abdullah Gul's approach to an apology campaign
    launched by Turkish intellectuals about World War I-era killings of
    Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman Empire, Arıtman argued Gul was
    a secret Armenian. "Look at his ethnic origins from his mother side,"
    she said in controversial remarks last week, which also drew reaction
    from her party.

    In her latest statements, Arıtman said she would open a counter-suit
    if Gul opened a case against her. "I was not engaged in racism. If a
    price is to be paid, I'll pay it," she said while commenting on the
    CHP warning.

    In response to Arıtman's allegations, Gul said yesterday his family
    comes from Satoglu on his mother's side and from Gul (Gulukimam)
    on his father's side and noted that the registered history of his
    family tracing back to centuries ago was "Muslim" and "Turk."

    Gul said he felt the need to inform the public about the recent
    claims, according to a written statement released by the presidency
    press office.

    Respecting all citizens "I respect ethnic origins, different faiths
    and family bonds of all my citizens and consider all these diversities
    as a reality and also richness of our country which has a history of
    empire," said the president. "I also want to stress that all citizens
    are equal with no discrimination. Nobody has superiority over the
    others. Everyone's rights are safeguarded in the Constitution."

    At the CHP party congress, Arıtman, in an attempt to clarify her
    statements about Gul's ethnic origins, said persons occupying state
    posts has no right to care for an ethnic identity. "I did not ask
    the president to reveal his ethnic identity. I want the president to
    fulfill his duty of protecting the Turkish Republic and the nation
    on the basis of the oath he took," she said.

    The apology campaign, which was countered by a declaration from a group
    of retired ambassadors, avoids the word "genocide" and uses instead the
    term "great catastrophe." Gul has distanced himself from the criticism,
    hailing the initiative as proof of Turkey's democratic health. On
    the contrary, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the military
    opposed the campaign, saying that it would yield harmful consequences.

    Toptan said making biased judgments about Turkey was "unfair," in
    remarks before a visit to Macedonia.

    "I have difficulty in understanding what those friends who issued
    the declaration want to do. Will this initiative make relations
    with Armenia gain impetus? Will it put an end to Armenian diaspora
    activities against Turkey? Will it help clear the events of [1915]
    and offer evidence? I cannot understand," he said.

    Toptan slammed Arıtman's controversial remarks as "unbecoming"
    as per the oath she took to serve as a parliamentarian.

    "We cannot display such a behavior of researching the ethnic origins
    of one another and reach conclusions," he said, adding that he did
    not approve of the statement made by the CHP deputy.

    International plot At his party's congress, CHP leader Deniz Baykal
    also criticized the apology campaign and considered it as part
    of systematic international efforts aimed at making Turkey feel
    guilty. He referred to the government's proposal, in cooperation
    with the CHP, to set up a joint committee of independent historians
    to study genocide allegations.

    He said while Turkey was defending that history should be left to
    historians, not politicians, a group of intellectuals' campaign was
    no different from a series of genocide resolutions passed in several
    countries' parliaments.

    "Some might be launching this campaign deliberately. Turkey should
    not take it seriously," Baykal said.

    --Boundary_(ID_7Gm5PhCYiudyFc28Gmg4zQ)--
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