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Turkish PM 'Genocide' Comment Triggers China Ties Concern

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  • Turkish PM 'Genocide' Comment Triggers China Ties Concern

    TURKISH PM 'GENOCIDE' COMMENT TRIGGERS CHINA TIES CONCERN
    Daren Butler

    Reuters
    July 15 2009
    UK

    Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's accusation of genocide in
    describing the rioting which killed 184 people in China's northwestern
    Muslim region of Xinjiang should come as no surprise to those familiar
    with his outspoken, populist style.

    The incident recalls the furore that followed Erdogan's haranguing of
    Israel's president over Israel's Gaza offensive at the Davos forum
    in January when he told Shimon Peres: "When it comes to killing you
    know very well how to kill".

    That outburst attracted strong approval among Turks and in the Arab
    world, but was also seen as potentially damaging for predominantly
    Muslim but secular Turkey's role as a Middle East mediator.

    His latest comments have drawn an indignant response in China, and
    Turkish commentators are now voicing concerns that his undiplomatic
    approach could harm the relations which Turkey is trying to develop
    with the world's third-biggest economy.

    The timing was unfortunate. President Abdullah Gul last month became
    the first Turkish president to visit China in 15 years, signing $1.5
    billion worth of trade deals, according to Turkish media. He also
    visited Xinjiang during his trip.

    Veteran Turkish political commentator Sami Kohen said it was natural
    for the Turkish people to show their sensitivity and anger over
    developments concerning their Uighur ethnic kin.

    "But state policy must be more cautious and moderate. Speeches and
    reactions since the start of the Xinjiang crisis have created serious
    doubts on whether a harmonious and consistent policy has been set out,"
    Kohen said in Milliyet newspaper.

    "It was seen with different incidents in the past that over-the-top
    expressions have put Turkish diplomacy in a difficult position and
    did not have any practical results," he said.

    The genocide label is particularly sensitive in Turkey, which strongly
    refutes Armenian claims that the killing of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks during World War One constituted genocide.

    The English-language China Daily has urged Erdogan to take back
    his remarks, describing them as interference in China's internal
    affairs. Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said the accusation did
    not make sense.

    On July 5, Uighurs attacked Han Chinese in the regional capital Urumqi
    after police tried to break up a protest against fatal attacks on
    Uighur workers at a factory in south China.

    Han Chinese launched revenge attacks two days later in what was
    Xinjiang's worst ethnic violence in decades. The death toll included
    46 Uighurs, a Turkic people who are largely Muslim and share linguistic
    and cultural bonds with Central Asia.

    Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told his Turkish counterpart by
    telephone on Sunday the Urumqi riots were a grave crime orchestrated
    by the "three evil forces", Xinhua news agency said, referring to
    extremism, separatism and terrorism.

    Commentator Cengiz Candar said the situation called for cool heads,
    given China's permanent membership of the United Nation's Security
    Council, which gives it veto powers in issues concerning Turkey such as
    the divided Mediterranean island of Cyprus, neighbouring Iraq and Iran.

    "Now is the time to overcome the 'tension' which has emerged between
    Turkey and China with a diplomacy which is cool, quiet and patient,"
    Candar said in the liberal daily Radikal.

    That diplomacy could face a fresh test in the near future after
    Erdogan said last week Turkey would grant a visa to exiled Uighur
    leader Rebiya Kadeer, who is based in the United States.

    China has blamed the ethnic unrest on exiled Uighur separatists,
    especially Kadeer, who denies the charge.
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