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  • Genocide Belief Seen As 'Insult' By Turkey

    GENOCIDE BELIEF SEEN AS 'INSULT' BY TURKEY
    Jennifer Campbell, [email protected]

    The Ottawa Citizen
    Wednesday, May 14, 2008

    The fact that the Canadian government has recognized Armenian claims
    of genocide by the Turks in 1915 still casts a shadow over relations
    between Canada and Turkey, the incoming ambassador says.

    Rafet Akgunay noted in an interview yesterday that Canada is one of the
    only governments in the world to recognize Armenian claims and said
    his government finds it particularly strange coming from a country
    that is known internationally as a peace-loving and peace-making
    nation. (In 2004, Canada's Parliament reversed the country's previous
    policy when it voted for a private member's bill that recognized as
    genocide the killing of Armenians during the First World War.)

    "It's taken as an insult in Turkey and it's an insult from a country
    which is known around the world as a country that loves peace and
    security and stability. This is just the other way around because
    you recognize something which is not established as fact.

    "Writing history is not the task of parliamentarians or officials of
    government," he said.

    Given that, Turkey has asked foreign governments to encourage both
    sides to study the archives and decide exactly what happened. Turkey
    has proposed a joint committee of historians from Turkey and Armenia,
    with the possibility of third-party historians joining in to come up
    with a decisive analysis of the history.

    That said, Mr. Akgunay said the Armenian issue is not the only one on
    his agenda -- indeed, it's just one facet of the political side. He's
    also going to work toward air agreements where Turkish Airlines could
    fly into Canada. "One of the first things I did in Canada was to
    attend a meeting of the Turkey-Canada Business Council and all the
    business people asked me to try my best to start flights from Turkey.

    Turkish Airlines is ready but there are still agreements to be made
    in Canada."

    He plans to develop the trade relationship. Two-way trade between
    Canada and Turkey now stands at $1.3 billion, which is "peanuts"
    for both countries.

    By comparison, Turkey's two-way trade with Russia is $25 billion.

    He will also work with Turkish-Canadians, who number about 50,000,
    many of whom contribute greatly to the economy, he said.

    Canadians Honoured

    Canadian biochemist Joseph H. Hulse was honoured by the Indian
    government with the Padma Shri Award at a ceremony at Rashtrapati
    Bhawan, the president's palace, last Monday.

    Mr. Hulse is a world expert in biotechnology, a former vice-president
    of Canada's International Development Research Centre and a one-time
    scientific adviser to the United Nations secretary general. The
    announcement said he's "devoted his life to research on food, nutrition
    and food security".

    The scientist first visited India in 1962 to represent Canada in
    the establishment of the International Food Technology Training and
    Research Centre. For the following 40 years, he travelled to India
    some 60 times to help with various food-related projects, specifically
    on efforts to alleviate chronic malnutrition among poor children in
    rural areas.

    Mr. Hulse is now a visiting professor at the Central Food Technological
    Research Institute in Mysore, India, and at the M.S.

    Swaminathan Research Foundation in Tamil Nadu. He's also the honorary
    fellow of the University of Manchester's Institute of Science and
    Technology and the Australian, British and New Zealand Institutes of
    Food Science Technology.

    A few days before Mr. Hulse received his award from India, a Canadian
    veteran received an award from Russia. Canadian Second World War
    veteran Jack Hendrie was one of the first Allied soldiers to cross
    the Elb River at Wismar to link up with Soviet forces in May 1945.

    A stretcher-bearer with the 224 Para Field Ambulance, Mr. Hendrie
    helped many injured Soviets in the field. For his work, all those
    years ago, he recently received a commemorative medal from the
    Russian government.

    MP Peter Stoffer delivered the medal to Mr. Hendrie, who lives near
    Maxville, Ont. Mr. Stoffer, who is the NDP's Veterans Affairs critic,
    got involved because one of his constituents in Nova Scotia worked
    for more than 20 years to get his friend the medal and Mr. Stoffer
    joined the effort.

    The MP conveyed a letter of congratulations from Russian Ambassador
    Georgiy Mamedov, who called Mr. Hendrie's sacrifice "priceless and
    unquestionable."

    EU Awards

    At Europe Day celebrations last night, EU Ambassador Dorian Prince
    recognized the winners of the 2008 Children's EU Drawing Competition
    where school children drew EU-themed pictures.

    The winners of the drawing contest are Queenswood Public School
    students Niana Lavallee, 10, Jack Vandermeer, 11, and Heather Barr,
    10; Lakeview Public School students Claire Fortin, 10, Samantha Adeli,
    10, Erica Jessen, 11, Nicole Kern, 10, Caitlin Cassidy Roe, 10, Gen
    Klein, 10, and Patrick Stone, 10; and Thomas D'Arcy McGee Catholic
    School students Sonya Bellefeuille, 12, and Shaima Gbeke, 10.

    Today, Mr. Prince is to award the EU-Canada Young Journalist Award
    for 2008. The winning journalists, who will travel to Brussels for
    a one-week study tour, are Gaetan Pouliot (Universite de Montreal),
    and Anna Olejarczyk and Trevor D'Arcy (University of British Columbia).
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