TURKEY RECALLS ENVOY AFTER SWEDEN RECOGNIZES ARMENIAN 'GENOCIDE'
Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
March 12 2010
Turkish Ambassador to Sweden Zergun Koruturk said Swedish lawmakers
"acted thinking that they were historians rather than parliamentarians,
and it's very, very unfortunate."
(RFE/RL) -- Turkey has reacted angrily to a decision by Sweden's
parliament to recognize as genocide the World War I-era mass killings
of Armenians by Turkish forces.
The parliament narrowly approved the resolution on March 11 despite
opposition from the government in Stockholm.
Ankara immediately recalled its ambassador to Sweden over what it
condemned as a resolution made for "political calculations." And it
said its Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, was canceling a visit
to the Scandinavian country planned for next week.
Sweden's move comes just a week after Ankara recalled its ambassador
from Washington following a U.S. congressional panel's decision to
approve a similar "genocide" resolution.
"I'm very disappointed," said Turkey's ambassador to Sweden, Zergun
Koruturk. "Unfortunately the parliamentarians -- I think they acted
thinking that they were historians rather than parliamentarians, and
it's very, very unfortunate. This is going to have drastic effects
on our bilateral relations and I don't think it will be compensated
in a short time."
Genocide Issue
Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were killed by their
Ottoman Turk rulers in 1915 in a planned campaign of extermination.
Turkey accepts that many Armenians were killed, but it rejects the
term "genocide," saying the death toll has been inflated and that
many Turks were also killed during a period of civil war and unrest.
Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian today thanked Swedish lawmaker
Goran Lennmarker, who was visiting Armenia as part of an Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Parliamentary Assembly
delegation, for helping pass the resolution.
Sarkisian noted that "recognition and condemnation of crimes committed
against humanity are the best means of preventing such crimes."
Razmik Zohrabyan, deputy chairman of the ruling Republican Party of
Armenia, told RFE/RL that he believes Sweden's move heralds a larger
change of attitude among Western countries.
"I welcome this move, because in the recent period I've seen that
the opinion of the international community, mainly European countries
and the United States, is changing towards the appreciation of moral
values, i.e. freedom of conscience, truth, justice and moral values,
pan-human moral values that are the same for all." Zohrabyan said.
Indeed, Sweden now joins a growing list of countries recognizing
the massacres as genocide, alongside Russia, France, and Switzerland
among others.
But the March 12 vote was razor-thin. It passed by a one-vote margin
thanks to several lawmakers from the ruling center-right coalition
who broke ranks to back the measure.
Conservative legislator Gustav Blix and Hans Linde of the Swedish Left
Party argued each side of the debate, with Blix saying: "This is not
something that should be decided by parliament. It is a question for
historians and not for politicians to decide on."
Linde responded that "If the victims are not acknowledged and get
their sufferings proved true, this trauma may go on for generations."
Complicating Normalization?
Some worry that the vote could complicate not just bilateral relations
between Turkey and Sweden -- which has been a firm backer of Ankara's
long-standing bid to join the European Union.
Sweden's foreign minister, Carl Bildt, said it would have a knock-on
effect on the halting process now under way to normalize ties between
Turkey and Armenia.
"I'm very concerned, I am worried about the consequences," Bildt said.
"I got a report from Turkey that the opposition now wants the
normalization of the contacts between Armenia and Turkey to stop. I
think this politicizing of history risks making reconciliation more
difficult."
Ankara has also made similar warnings. In the latest, an official
in Turkey's ruling party said before Sweden's vote that Ankara was
extremely unlikely at this point to ratify its fence-mending protocols
with Armenia.
Suat Kiniklioglu, deputy chairman of the Justice and Development Party,
told RFE/RL's Armenian Service that Turkish ratification had been made
"more difficult" by the U.S. resolution.
But Swedish lawmaker Goran Lennmarker, told RFE/RL that he believed
the reconciliation process would not be jeopardized, "irrespective
of what happened" in Sweden or the United States.
Lennmarker is chairman of the Swedish parliament's Foreign Affairs
Committee and the special representative of the OSCE's Parliamentary
Assembly for Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory disputed by Armenia and
Azerbaijan and site of a war in the 1990s.
"There should be ratification in the [parliament] of Turkey of the
agreement as soon as possible, they don't' have to wait for anything
else, not least a solution on Nagorno-Karabakh," Lennmarker said.
RFE/RL's Armenian Service contributed to this report. With agency
reports
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
March 12 2010
Turkish Ambassador to Sweden Zergun Koruturk said Swedish lawmakers
"acted thinking that they were historians rather than parliamentarians,
and it's very, very unfortunate."
(RFE/RL) -- Turkey has reacted angrily to a decision by Sweden's
parliament to recognize as genocide the World War I-era mass killings
of Armenians by Turkish forces.
The parliament narrowly approved the resolution on March 11 despite
opposition from the government in Stockholm.
Ankara immediately recalled its ambassador to Sweden over what it
condemned as a resolution made for "political calculations." And it
said its Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, was canceling a visit
to the Scandinavian country planned for next week.
Sweden's move comes just a week after Ankara recalled its ambassador
from Washington following a U.S. congressional panel's decision to
approve a similar "genocide" resolution.
"I'm very disappointed," said Turkey's ambassador to Sweden, Zergun
Koruturk. "Unfortunately the parliamentarians -- I think they acted
thinking that they were historians rather than parliamentarians, and
it's very, very unfortunate. This is going to have drastic effects
on our bilateral relations and I don't think it will be compensated
in a short time."
Genocide Issue
Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were killed by their
Ottoman Turk rulers in 1915 in a planned campaign of extermination.
Turkey accepts that many Armenians were killed, but it rejects the
term "genocide," saying the death toll has been inflated and that
many Turks were also killed during a period of civil war and unrest.
Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian today thanked Swedish lawmaker
Goran Lennmarker, who was visiting Armenia as part of an Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Parliamentary Assembly
delegation, for helping pass the resolution.
Sarkisian noted that "recognition and condemnation of crimes committed
against humanity are the best means of preventing such crimes."
Razmik Zohrabyan, deputy chairman of the ruling Republican Party of
Armenia, told RFE/RL that he believes Sweden's move heralds a larger
change of attitude among Western countries.
"I welcome this move, because in the recent period I've seen that
the opinion of the international community, mainly European countries
and the United States, is changing towards the appreciation of moral
values, i.e. freedom of conscience, truth, justice and moral values,
pan-human moral values that are the same for all." Zohrabyan said.
Indeed, Sweden now joins a growing list of countries recognizing
the massacres as genocide, alongside Russia, France, and Switzerland
among others.
But the March 12 vote was razor-thin. It passed by a one-vote margin
thanks to several lawmakers from the ruling center-right coalition
who broke ranks to back the measure.
Conservative legislator Gustav Blix and Hans Linde of the Swedish Left
Party argued each side of the debate, with Blix saying: "This is not
something that should be decided by parliament. It is a question for
historians and not for politicians to decide on."
Linde responded that "If the victims are not acknowledged and get
their sufferings proved true, this trauma may go on for generations."
Complicating Normalization?
Some worry that the vote could complicate not just bilateral relations
between Turkey and Sweden -- which has been a firm backer of Ankara's
long-standing bid to join the European Union.
Sweden's foreign minister, Carl Bildt, said it would have a knock-on
effect on the halting process now under way to normalize ties between
Turkey and Armenia.
"I'm very concerned, I am worried about the consequences," Bildt said.
"I got a report from Turkey that the opposition now wants the
normalization of the contacts between Armenia and Turkey to stop. I
think this politicizing of history risks making reconciliation more
difficult."
Ankara has also made similar warnings. In the latest, an official
in Turkey's ruling party said before Sweden's vote that Ankara was
extremely unlikely at this point to ratify its fence-mending protocols
with Armenia.
Suat Kiniklioglu, deputy chairman of the Justice and Development Party,
told RFE/RL's Armenian Service that Turkish ratification had been made
"more difficult" by the U.S. resolution.
But Swedish lawmaker Goran Lennmarker, told RFE/RL that he believed
the reconciliation process would not be jeopardized, "irrespective
of what happened" in Sweden or the United States.
Lennmarker is chairman of the Swedish parliament's Foreign Affairs
Committee and the special representative of the OSCE's Parliamentary
Assembly for Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory disputed by Armenia and
Azerbaijan and site of a war in the 1990s.
"There should be ratification in the [parliament] of Turkey of the
agreement as soon as possible, they don't' have to wait for anything
else, not least a solution on Nagorno-Karabakh," Lennmarker said.
RFE/RL's Armenian Service contributed to this report. With agency
reports
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress