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Turkish Ambassador Returns To Sweden, Ending Diplomatic Row

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  • Turkish Ambassador Returns To Sweden, Ending Diplomatic Row

    TURKISH AMBASSADOR RETURNS TO SWEDEN, ENDING DIPLOMATIC ROW
    Lilit Gevorgyan

    World Markets Research Centre
    Global Insight
    March 31, 2010

    Turkey's ambassador to Sweden, Zergun Koruturk, has returned to
    her post in the Scandinavian country, which she had left under the
    Turkish government's instruction on 11 March. The decision was an act
    of protest against the Swedish parliament's resolution on the same
    day, branding the killings of over 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks in 1915 as genocide. The resolution, which carries merely moral
    value and does not refer to any reparations to the few survivors of
    the genocide, came after a similar bill was passed by the U.S. House
    Committee on Foreign Affairs on 4 March (seeTurkey - Sweden - Armenia:
    12 March 2010:). The decision to return Koruturk was taken after the
    Swedish government of Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt decided to
    distance itself from the parliament's resolution, citing that it may
    harm relations with Turkey, and apologised to the Turkish government.

    His Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced that he accepted
    the Swedish apology. Koruturk stated to the Turkish Anatolu news agency
    that Turkey expects "compensation for this error", although she did
    not specify what compensation the Turkish government has in mind.

    Significance:Despite the emotive rhetoric, the Turkish government
    had to take the only reasonable step and reinstate its ambassador
    to Sweden, as it did not stand any realistic chance of reversing
    the Swedish parliament's decision. In fact, the Turkish government
    has used this method of protest with most of the countries that have
    adopted similar resolutions. The Turkish government, however, managed
    to secure the Swedish government's already-declared commitment to
    fully support Turkey's entry into the European Union, launched back
    in 2005. However, this promise may be short lived, as Reinfeldt's
    centre-right coalition is set to lose power in the upcoming September
    election. The handling of the Swedish parliament's adoption of the
    Armenian Genocide resolution has further brought into question the
    government's policies. Openly apologising for the decision supported
    by the majority of Swedish deputies--including some from the ruling
    coalition--put the government in a precarious situation, as many saw
    Reinfeldt's and his outspoken foreign minister Carl Bildt's actions
    as defining the will of the elected parliament. Korturk's return to
    Sweden is a positive development for both countries, and will help
    them to put this diplomatic row behind them.
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