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ANKARA: Commons Sense Leads Swedish Parliament'S Refusal To Define A

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  • ANKARA: Commons Sense Leads Swedish Parliament'S Refusal To Define A

    COMMONS SENSE LEADS SWEDISH PARLIAMENT'S REFUSAL TO DEFINE ARMENIAN CASE AS GENOCIDE

    Turkish Press
    June 16 2008

    ATAA - On June 12, 2008, the Swedish parliament, with an overwhelming
    vote of 245 - 37 rejected to a resolution that characterized the 1915
    Armenian case as genocide. The decision of the Swedish Parliament
    followed long deliberations.

    The resolution was rejected because: (1) the United Nations has
    never accepted the Armenian case as genocide; (2) the United Nations
    Genocide Convention does not apply retroactively to events before 1948;
    (3) there is substantial disagreement between experts regarding the
    events of 1915; (4) there is concern by experts about broadening
    the definition of genocide and overlapping with other crimes; and,
    (5) a legislature should not intervene in foreign affairs and disturb
    the Turkish domestic process.

    ATAA President-Elect Gunay Evinch and 1991-93 Fulbright Scholar on
    the Armenian issue, commented that that in 1986 the United Nations
    considered the Whitaker Report on the Crime of Genocide, which
    attempted to slip in the Armenian case in a footnote: "That caused
    a substantial debate, the result of which was the UN's decision to
    'receive' rather than 'accept' the report. Receiving is a diplomatic
    way of rejecting."

    Evinch also reminded that in 1917, Sweden lead the formation of
    the Scandinavian Commission of Inquiry into allegations of Armenian
    massacres, and reports regarding that the Armenians had engaged in a
    massive revolt to assist the Russian invasion of March 1915. Similarly,
    in 1919 the India Muslim Commission of Inquiry was formed to report
    on the atrocities committed by the Armenian Revolt against Muslims
    in eastern Anatolia 1880-1919. Both Commissions were discouraged and
    closed by the British Empire.

    The vast majority of experts on the Ottoman Empire reject the Armenian
    case as genocide -- Bernard Lewis, Guenther Lewy, Andrew Mango,
    Avigdor, Levy, Stanford Shaw, Masaki Kakiszaki, David Fromkin,
    Norman Stone, Edward Erickson, Heath Lowry, and Justin McCarthy,
    to list a few notables.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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