Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Van Cemetery Proves To Be Villagers' Hoax

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Van Cemetery Proves To Be Villagers' Hoax

    VAN CEMETERY PROVES TO BE VILLAGERS' HOAX

    Hurriyet
    http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/english/ domestic/11790546.asp?scr=1
    June 4 2009
    Turkey

    VAN - Two villagers have admitted to fabricating claims that a school
    was planned on a former Armenian cemetery in a village in the eastern
    province of Van. They said they invented the story because they did
    not want to be bothered by noisy children.

    In an April 22 story, it was reported that an inquiry was launched
    after locals complained that a school was being built on land formerly
    used as an Armenian cemetery in the village of Aydınocak in Van.

    The area was officially assigned to the village as pastureland,
    but some villagers alleged that it contained an Armenian
    cemetery. Aydınocak's muhtar, or administrative head, Bahri
    AltıntaÅ~_, told the Anatolia news agency that the village was upset
    about the stories that bones were dug up in a school construction site.

    "Two people from the village made the claim to journalists who came
    to the village. We approached them and asked them to repeat their
    claims to us. Both said they didn't want a school to be built near
    their homes and that was why they made the claims," AltıntaÅ~_
    said. In the past, Muslims and Armenians used to live side by side,
    said the muhtar. "We respect all religions. We would never build a
    school on top of a cemetery," he said.

    He said some stones that had crosses on them were found elsewhere
    and brought to the village, only to be shown as if they were dug up
    during the construction. One villager, Fehim Yurdagul, said reports on
    school construction had portrayed the village as anti-Armenian. "We
    respect all beliefs of not only Armenians but everyone. Villagers
    would never have allowed building on a cemetery," he said.

    Previously, the local administrator of the wider region of GevaÅ~_,
    Tahsin Aksu, had dismissed claims, explaining that the villagers had
    told him the bones that were buried there belonged to animals that
    died of a disease 50 years ago.
Working...
X