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BAKU: Ankara Responds To Obama's Message

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  • BAKU: Ankara Responds To Obama's Message

    ANKARA RESPONDS TO OBAMA'S MESSAGE

    news.az
    APril 26 2010
    Azerbaijan

    Barack Obama Barack Obama has declined to use the word 'genocide'
    to describe the atrocities experienced by Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire a century ago.

    In Ankara, reactions were mixed. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
    appeared to welcome the statement, saying on Saturday that 'Turkey's
    sensitivities have been observed' and that Obama's refusal to call
    the 1915 events 'genocide' was due to the diplomatic efforts of Turkey.

    But the Foreign Ministry, in a written statement, called Obama's
    statement an 'incorrect and one-sided political perception'.

    'We deeply regret this statement which reflects an incorrect and
    one-sided political perception. The toughest enemy of the historical
    facts is subjective memory records. No nation has the right to impose
    its memory records on another nation,' the Foreign Ministry statement
    indicated.

    The statement further added that 'third counties have neither the
    right nor the authority to judge the history of Turkish-Armenian
    relations with political motives'.

    The opposition parties, which object to the government's efforts to
    restore relations with Armenia, were also unhappy with the statement.

    Onur Oymen, the deputy chairman of the main opposition Republican
    People's Party (CHP), said the use of the term 'Mets Yeghern' was no
    different from using the word 'genocide', while Nationalist Movement
    Party (MHP) leader Devlet Bahceli called Obama's terminology a 'play of
    words' that meant his accusations against the Turkish nation remained
    in place. Bahceli also accused Erdogan of sharing the same position as
    the Armenian diaspora by welcoming Obama's statement and reiterated
    his call for the withdrawal of two protocols signed by Turkey and
    Armenia on normalizing bilateral relations.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu criticized Obama's statement
    and said that it was 'unacceptable'.

    'If we are going to share grief for humanitarian reasons, then we
    would expect respect for our own grief as well,' Davutoglu said.

    The Turkish Coalition of America also said Obama's statement did not
    address 'the equally tragic loss of Muslim lives in this turbulent
    period of Ottoman history'.

    'Where does the ethnic cleansing of Ottoman Turks from the Balkans,
    Eastern Turkey and the Caucasus - with 5 million lost and 5.5 million
    refugees - come on the president's list of 'worst atrocities of the
    20th century'?' Turkish Coalition of America President G. Lincoln
    McCurdy said.

    Armenians in the US, on the other hand, were disappointed that the
    statement did not include the word genocide. 'Today we join with
    Armenians in the United States and around the world in voicing our
    sharp disappointment at the president's failure to properly condemn
    and commemorate the Armenian Genocide,' Armenian National Committee
    of America Chairman Ken Hachikian said.

    Obama is closely watching rapprochement efforts between Turkey and
    Armenia, which are full of difficulties.

    Ankara and Yerevan signed protocols for reconciliation in October
    envisaging the reopening of the borders and the establishment of
    diplomatic relations. But the protocols need to be approved by the
    parliaments of both countries.

    Just a few days before 24 April, Armenia's ruling coalition on 22
    April said it had decided to freeze the ratification of the protocols.

    The Armenian government claimed that the Turkish side had refused to
    fulfill the requirement of ratifying the accords without preconditions
    in a reasonable time.

    The Turkish parliament has held up ratification of the deal as Turkey
    presses for a settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan over a region
    in Azerbaijan that has been under Armenian control since a war in the
    1990s. But Turkish officials, including Foreign Minister Davutoglu and
    President Abdullah Gul, have voiced their expectations that the freeze
    in the normalization process between Ankara and Yerevan will serve as
    an opportunity for both sides to thoroughly consider the rest of the
    process with a mutual understanding of the difficulties on each side.
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