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ANKARA: Turk Business Association Releases Armenian Bill Report

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  • ANKARA: Turk Business Association Releases Armenian Bill Report

    TURK BUSINESS ASSOCIATION RELEASES ARMENIAN BILL REPORT

    Hurriyet
    May 16 2008
    Turkey

    Turkey's top business association has released a report on an Armenian
    bill regarding the incidents of 1915, which was adopted last year by
    the Committee on Foreign Relations of the U.S. House of Representatives
    but was turned down by the general assembly.

    The report on , drawn up by researcher and specialist in law David
    Saltzman for the Turkish Industrialists' and Businessmen's Association
    (TUSIAD), was presented on Thursday at a Washington conference on
    Turkish-U.S. relations.

    In the report, TUSIAD declared its will to form a platform in which
    the incidents experienced by Armenian citizens of the Ottoman Empire
    during World War I can be discussed.

    The report, "U.S. House of Representatives Resolution 106: Legal
    and Factual Deficiencies," said that there had never been a legal
    opinion that can justify the 1915 incidents as "genocide," and
    those who contend the allegations had never brought them before an
    international court.

    "The global public opinion is focused on this one-sided view. And
    the rejection to acknowledge facts and the failure to consider
    the historical background of the incidents help this view attain a
    continuity," the report said.

    Armenia, with the backing of the diaspora, claims up to 1.5 million
    of their kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings in 1915. The
    Armenian diaspora has lately increased its organized activities
    throughout the world for the acknowledgment of their unfounded
    allegations in regard to the incidents of 1915 as "genocide" by
    national and local parliaments.

    Turkey rejects the claims, saying that 300,000 Armenians along with
    at least as many Turks died in civil strife that emerged when the
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    Turkey is of the view that parliaments and other political institutions
    are not the appropriate forums to debate and pass judgment on
    disputed periods of history. Past events and controversial periods
    of history should be left to historians for their dispassionate study
    and evaluation.

    In 2005, Turkey officially proposed the establishment of a joint
    commission comprised of historians and other experts from both sides
    to study the events of 1915, utilizing not only Turkish and Armenian
    archives, but also those of relevant third-party countries and to share
    their findings with the public. Armenia has not responded positively
    to this initiative, as yet.
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