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AFP: Turkish Envoy Returns To Sweden Two Weeks After 'Genocide' Vote

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  • AFP: Turkish Envoy Returns To Sweden Two Weeks After 'Genocide' Vote

    TURKISH ENVOY RETURNS TO SWEDEN TWO WEEKS AFTER 'GENOCIDE' VOTE

    Agence France Presse
    March 30, 2010 Tuesday 11:52 AM GMT

    Turkey's ambassador to Sweden flew back to her post Tuesday, some two
    weeks after she was recalled over the Swedish parliament's recognition
    of an Armenian "genocide", the Anatolia news agency reported.

    Speaking to reporters before her departure to Stockholm, Zergun
    Koruturk said her return became possible after the Swedish government
    distanced itself from the parliament's decision.

    "The Swedish government has clearly said that the decision would not
    be put into practice," Koruturk was quoted by Anatolia as saying.

    Ankara still expects Stockholm to take steps to "compensate for this
    error," she said. "I hope the Swedish government will do everthing
    in its power."

    Ankara had announced last week that the ambassador would return to
    Stockholm soon.

    Koruturk was summoned back to Ankara on March 11 after the Swedish
    parliament voted by a narrow margin to recognise the Ottoman massacres
    of Armenians during World War I as genocide, despite the government's
    advice not to do so.

    Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt later apologised to Ankara,
    a move which his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan called
    "very positive".

    Foreign Minister Carl Bildt also said that the position of his
    government, which supports Turkey's entry into the European Union,
    "remains unchanged".

    The Swedish vote came in the footsteps of a March 4 vote by a key US
    Congress panel that branded the massacres as genocide, also prompting
    Ankara to recall its ambassador there.

    Last week, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu indicated that
    he was not yet ready to send his ambassador back to Washington as
    the two cases were different.

    "The Swedes clearly apologised," he said.

    In a telephone conversation with US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton
    at the weekend, Davutoglu urged the US admininstration to block the
    bill, saying it was "critical" to bilateral ties.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were killed in systematic
    massacres during World War I as the Ottoman Empire fell apart.

    Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label and says between
    300,000 and 500,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks perished in
    civil strife during the chaos of war.
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