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  • ANKARA: Prosecutors prompted to begin probe into apology campaign

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 10 2009


    Prosecutors prompted to begin probe into apology campaign



    The Ankara Chief Prosecutor's Office has launched an investigation
    into a campaign initiated by a number of Turkish intellectuals who
    have been collecting signatures for a statement personally apologizing
    for events that took place in 1915 that Armenians claim constituted
    genocide.

    According to the Anatolia news agency, six Ankara residents -- Hasan
    Hüseyin Satır, Sabahat Ã-zgür, Mehmet
    Ä°nal Kolburan, Hüseyin ErdoÄ?an, Serdar Orhaner
    and KürÅ?at Karacabey -- submitted a petition for
    criminal prosecution of the campaign organizers and the people who
    added their signatures to the campaign. They based their argument on
    the grounds established by the Turkish Penal Code's (TCK) infamous
    Article 301, which has been used to prosecute several intellectuals,
    journalists and activists for `insulting Turkishness.' Submitted
    yesterday, the petition quoted the statement made in the apology
    campaign: `My conscience does not accept the insensitivity shown to
    and the denial of the Great Catastrophe that Ottoman Armenians were
    subjected to in 1915. I reject this injustice, and for my part, I
    empathize with the feelings and pain of my Armenian brothers. I
    apologize to them.' The petition made to the prosecutor's office also
    stated that `those so-called intellectuals close their eyes and
    conscience to the fact that in the same time period Armenian gangs,
    with the cooperation of the imperialist occupiers, savagely killed
    hundreds of thousands of Turkish people, and the phenomenon that they
    mention is the phenomenon the Armenian claims of genocide are based
    on.' Calling the `so-called genocide claims' baseless -- which they
    described as also being the stance of the Turkish state -- they
    further said the `so-called intellectuals describe the state policy as
    `denial' and declare that they do not approve of it, so they accuse
    the Turkish nation of `committing genocide',' and as such, they are
    `degrading the Turkish nation.'

    The prosecutor's office started an investigation into the issue; the
    organizers of the Internet campaign will be asked to testify and the
    Web site www.ozurdiliyoruz.com will be investigated, Anatolia
    noted. The apology campaign collected close to 27,000 signatures on
    the Internet since it was started in December of last year.



    10 January 2009, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH WIRES Ä°STANBUL

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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