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  • Turkey's decision to recall ambassador 'blackmail'

    Turkey's decision to recall ambassador 'blackmail'

    Updated Wed. Apr. 22 2009 4:13 PM ET
    CTV.ca News Staff

    Turkey's decision to recall its ambassador to Canada to protest an
    event commemorating the Armenian genocide is "blatant blackmail" of
    the Canadian government and people, says a prominent member of the
    Canadian-Armenian community.

    Turkey has recalled Ambassador Rafet Akgunay to protest the decision
    by some Parliamentarians to attend an event Tuesday night that
    commemorated Canada's decision to label the 1915 killing of Armenians
    as genocide.

    Parliament voted in favour of a private member's bill acknowledging
    the genocide five years ago under former prime minister Paul Martin.

    It is estimated that as many as 1.5 million Armenians were slaughtered
    by Ottoman Turks. However, Turkey strongly objects to the idea that
    the killings amount to genocide, arguing that the death toll is
    exaggerated and the casualties were a result of civil war.

    Turkey's move to recall its ambassador is "ridiculous" and the
    Canadian government should respond in kind, said Aris Babikian, the
    executive director of the Armenian National Committee of Canada.

    "This is purely and blatant blackmail of Canada and the Canadian
    people. And this is blatant interference in our internal affairs,"
    Babikian told CTV.ca in a telephone interview from Ottawa on
    Wednesday. "We are not a banana republic where Turkey can dictate what
    to do, what to say, what to organize."

    The event was organized by the Congress of Canadian Armenians on the
    fifth anniversary of Canada's decision to formally recognize the
    events of 1915 as genocide.

    The event in question was attended by Citizenship and Immigration
    Minister Jason Kenney and Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff, among
    other members of Parliament.

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper sent a message to the event's organizers
    in which he paid tribute to the "terrible loss of life during the
    demise of the Ottoman empire in 1915, and in particular the horrific
    suffering endured by the Armenian people."

    A spokesperson for Kenney referred media queries to the Department of
    Foreign Affairs, while calls to a spokesperson for Ignatieff, as well
    as to Turkey's embassy in Ottawa, were not immediately returned on
    Wednesday.

    Foreign Affairs spokesperson Andre Lemay told CTV.ca in an email that
    the federal government's position on the issue is "not an indictment
    of modern Turkey" and said the ambassador's recall does not indicate
    that diplomatic relations between the two countries have been severed.

    Lemay said Canada maintains a good relationship with Turkey, which
    Canada considers a key ally.

    According to Burak Ozugergin, a spokesperson for Turkey's Foreign
    Ministry, Akgunay was recalled for "thorough evaluations and
    consultations."

    Ozugergin did not specify why the ambassador was recalled or how long
    the recall the will last.

    However, a Turkish government official who spoke on the condition of
    anonymity said the move was in response to the event held in Ottawa on
    Tuesday evening to commemorate the killing of Armenians at the close
    of the First World War.

    This is not the first time that Turkey has recalled its ambassador to
    Canada over the genocide issue.

    In 2006, Turkey withdrew its ambassador, pulled out of a planned
    military exercise in Canada and criticized Harper for comments he made
    that supported recognizing the killings as genocide.

    Arman Akopian, the Armenian Charge d'Affaires to Canada, said he
    couldn't comment on Canadian-Turkish relations and hoped the situation
    could be resolved quickly. But he added that Canada recognized the
    Armenian genocide five years ago and has made numerous official
    statements since, and he questioned the timing of Turkey's actions.

    "Frankly, I see no strong reasons Turkey should have acted this way,"
    he told CTV Newsnet.

    He added that Canada has been a strong supporter of negotiations
    between Turkey and Armenia to reopen their borders to each other,
    which have been closed since 1993.

    "Canada has always been very supportive of the Armenia-Turkish
    reconciliation process and has been encouraging Armenia and Turkey to
    engage in dialogue to continue the negotiations," he said. Bill
    introduced in U.S.

    Babikian said that Canada's decision to recognize the genocide not
    only acknowledges an important human rights issue. It also honours the
    Canadians who raised money to bring Armenian orphans to Canada in
    1922, an event that Babikian said marked Canada's role in "pioneering"
    international humanitarian efforts.

    The issue is also coming to the fore in the United States, where
    legislators have introduced a bill that would label the deaths
    genocide. If the legislation is passed, it could compromise President
    Barack Obama's goal of improving relations with Turkey, a NATO ally.

    Intense opposition from the Bush administration quashed a similar bill
    two years ago.

    During his campaign, Obama called the killings genocide. But during a
    recent visit to Turkey he avoided using the term.

    Freelance journalist Nicholas Birch said Wednesday that while the
    ambassador's recall has garnered little attention in the Turkish
    media, the issue of the genocide is one that still resonates today.

    "To be fair, this is something that happened before the foundation of
    the Turkish Republic, this is something which happened in the last
    days of the Ottoman Empire," Birch told CTV Newsnet from Istanbul.

    "Although, the interesting thing is - and I think this is probably why
    it's so sensitive - is that many of the people who played an important
    part in the clearances of 1915 actually ended up taking quite
    significant posts in the Republican government which came in in
    1923. So there is a kind of bloodline which goes back from the last
    days of the Ottoman Empire into the Republic, which was set up in
    '23."

    According to Birch, while Turks are not taught about the genocide at
    school, they can read about it in books written by Armenian and
    Western historians and are increasingly engaging in discussions about
    the events.

    "So there is the beginning of a debate, but the trouble is that this
    is a state policy that 1915 is absolutely not a genocide and the state
    in this country is still very, very powerful."

    With files from The Associated Press
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