Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Yerevan Picks Historians For Commission

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

  • ANKARA: Yerevan Picks Historians For Commission

    YEREVAN PICKS HISTORIANS FOR COMMISSION

    Hurriyet Daily News
    http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=yere van-picks-historians-for-commision-2009-10-19
    Oct 19 2009
    Turkey

    Yerevan has already picked the Armenian historians expected to
    participate in the controversial history commission, although the
    historic agreement aimed at normalizing relations between Turkey and
    Armenia has yet to be ratified by either parliament.

    Also, an Armenian historian who was born in Istanbul has been
    unofficially put in charge of the committee by the Turkish government.

    The history commission, which is expected to be part of an
    intergovernmental commission between the two countries, is one of
    the most delicate matters in the recently signed diplomatic protocols.

    Although not mentioned in the protocols, Turkey has been naming a
    settlement on the long-standing territorial dispute of Nagorno-Karabakh
    and the history commission as preconditions for reconciliation with its
    ex-Soviet neighbor. Ankara says the joint history commission should
    study and discuss the 1915 deaths of Armenians during the last days
    of the Ottoman Empire.

    Armenian President Serge Sarkisian and his government rejected
    Turkey's offer of a history commission, labeling it as "politically
    motivated." However, while saying Armenia would never step down
    from its stance on the 1915 killings, Yerevan has already chosen the
    historians for the commission.

    The names for the commission were selected by the administration of
    Sarkisian, a senior Armenian government official told the Hurriyet
    Daily News & Economic Review. The official was speaking on the
    condition of anonymity due the sensitivity of the issue. Another
    diplomatic source from the Turkish side also verified the appointments,
    further saying that the commission would begin working immediately
    if the diplomatic protocols are ratified by both the Turkish and
    Armenian parliaments.

    Meanwhile, an Armenian historian who was born in Istanbul is
    unofficially holding meetings for Turkey about the establishment of
    the commission. The Armenian historian, who went to Yerevan last year
    to conduct research using the archives of the Genocide Museum, is
    also the first historian of Armenian origin who was granted special
    permission by former President Fahri Koruturk to conduct research
    using the Ottoman archives in 1974.

    The Armenian side would offer only Armenian historians to the
    commission, he said, adding that historians from the diaspora, who
    have been carrying out research in the archives of many countries,
    would not be included.

    Ara Sarafian, a leading diaspora historian and the director
    of London-based Gomidas Institute, said the commission matter is
    political and he does not want to comment on the issue. In a previous
    interview with the Daily News, Sarafian said Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan's call for a history commission was a positive
    move, but added that Armenia is not the right address for the issue.

    "The archived documents in Armenia are insufficient. The freedom of
    historians is limited. So, a delicate matter such as genocide will
    be pulled into the political arena," he said.
Working...
X