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VoA: Turkey Objects to Obama Statement on Armenian Killings

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  • VoA: Turkey Objects to Obama Statement on Armenian Killings

    Voice of America
    April 25 2009


    Turkey Objects to Obama Statement on Armenian Killings

    By VOA News
    25 April 2009


    Turkey's government has objected to U.S. President Barack Obama's
    statement recognizing the killings of more than a million Armenians
    during the final years of the Ottoman empire.


    Speaking in Bulgaria at a meeting in Sofia, Turkish President Abdullah
    Gul said Saturday that the U.S. president should also have expressed
    sympathy for the "hundreds of thousands of Turks and Muslims" killed
    between 1915 and 1923.

    Turkey's Foreign Ministry complained that certain points in
    Mr. Obama's statement were "unacceptable."

    On Friday, President Obama released a statement to mark Armenian
    Remembrance Day that said the mass killings of an estimated 1.5
    million Armenians was one of the "great atrocities" of the 20th
    century.

    During his presidential campaign, Mr. Obama had described the Armenian
    deaths as genocide, but he has not used that description since taking
    office.

    Mr. Obama also encouraged the Armenian and Turkish people to move
    toward reconciliation by addressing the facts of the past.

    Armenia considers the mass killings genocide by Turkish forces. But
    Turkey has strongly rejected the genocide claim, saying the Armenian
    death toll is inflated and that many Turks also were killed during the
    collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

    Armenians say the early 20th century deaths were the result of an
    orchestrated campaign by Ottoman Turks against their people and are
    stepping up efforts to have the deaths internationally recognized as
    genocide.

    France, Canada and Switzerland are among the countries that have
    recognized the genocide claim. Other nations, including the United
    States, have not.


    Some information for this report was provided by AFP and AP.
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