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ANKARA: Sour Taste Of Sudanese Visit

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  • ANKARA: Sour Taste Of Sudanese Visit

    SOUR TASTE OF SUDANESE VISIT

    Turkish Daily News
    Jan 24 2008
    Turkey

    Sudanese President Omar Hasan al-Bashir's visit to Turkey has shocked
    international relations experts who openly condemn Ankara's top level
    contacts with a leader held responsible for humanitarian atrocities
    in his own country.

    "One would think Turkey's leaders would be a little more careful
    before laying down the red carpet for the likes of President Omar
    al Bashir of Sudan," said former United States ambassador to Ankara,
    Morton Abromowitz. The international community considers Bashir as an
    illegitimate dictator presiding over a pariah state guilty of crimes
    against humanity, he said.

    "He is a seemingly strange bedfellow for Turkey's AKP [Justice and
    Development Party] trying to prove to many domestic and Western
    observers of its balanced, well-calibrated foreign policy, and its
    attachment to international norms," Abromowitz said.

    Last year, defying Turkish state policy of avoiding contacts with
    Bashir, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan visited Sudanese capital
    Khartoum and said that "Muslims would commit such murders."

    Bashir is considered to have given a free hand to the Janjaweed,
    the Arab militia that commits mass killings and systematic violence
    against Darfur's population to quell the rebellion launched in
    2003 by the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A), representing
    non-Muslim tribal Africans, and the Justice and Equality Movement
    (JEM), a movement of African Muslims to claim equal rights.

    A peace deal was signed in 2006 between the government and rebel
    factions in the Darfur region, only to incite divisions between
    dissident groups and exacerbate violence. In June 2006, three rebel
    groups including the JEM and part of the SLM/A joined forces to form
    the National Redemption Front (NRF), which opposes the May 2006
    peace agreement. At least 200,000 people have lost their life and
    2.5 million people have been driven from their homes as aresult of
    violence in the region.

    Government policy alienates experts

    The AKP's attempts to form contacts with the al -Bashir government had
    been blocked by intense resistance from Foreign Ministry officials
    who asked President Abdullah Gul, at the time foreign minister,
    to ignore the Sudanese leader's requests to visit Turkey.

    But they failed to stop Erdoðan from visiting Darfur in March 2006
    to participate in a meeting of the Arab League, where he said that
    no assimilation or genocide was committed in Darfur.

    International relations expert Soli Ozel dubbed the visit as "foreign
    policy fantasies of the government" and lamented the decision to
    welcome Bashir in Ankara.

    "The government claims to be able to speak about everything with
    everyone. This is nonsense and is a shame to Turkey," said Ozel.

    Abromowitz pointed to Turkey's endeavor to persuade the international
    community that there was no Armenian "genocide" in 1915 and noted
    that Bashir's visit will reduce the persuasiveness of Turkey's thesis.

    --Boundary_(ID_Rc3pH9910lPYgrRRqNH7Ow)--
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