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CNN: Turkey Protests Swedish Genocide Vote

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  • CNN: Turkey Protests Swedish Genocide Vote

    TURKEY PROTESTS SWEDISH GENOCIDE VOTE
    By Ivan Watson and Yesim Comert, CNN

    CNN World
    http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/03/12/t urkey.sweden.genocide/
    March 12 2010

    Istanbul, Turkey (CNN) -- Turkey has canceled a high-level summit
    scheduled to take place in Sweden next week in protest of a resolution
    passed by the Swedish Parliament, recognizing the 1915 killings of
    ethnic Armenians in Ottoman Turkey as genocide.

    The Turkish government also recalled its ambassador from Stockholm
    for consultations.

    "Those who think that historical facts and Turkey's views of its
    own past will change with decisions made on the basis of political
    interests of foreign parliaments are seriously deluded," the Turkish
    prime minister's office said in a written statement late Thursday.

    The Turkey-Sweden Summit was scheduled for Wednesday.

    This is the second time in less then two weeks that the Turkish
    government has denounced a foreign parliament's decision to label a
    bloody chapter of World War I history "genocide."

    Last week, Turkey recalled its ambassador from Washington, after the
    U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee narrowly voted in favor of a
    non-binding resolution, declaring the Armenian deaths genocide.

    On Tuesday, Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told
    journalists he wouldn't be sending ambassador Namik Tan back to his
    post in Washington until he sees "clarity" on the resolution.

    Both the White House and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed
    opposition to the resolution before and after its passage, arguing
    it would hurt relations with an important NATO military ally. House
    lawmakers narrowly approved the resolution by a 23-22 vote.

    Similarly, the Turkish government opposed Sweden's Armenian genocide
    resolution. Swedish lawmakers voted to ratify the bill on Thursday,
    by a single vote.

    "Historical events should not be judged at a political level, but
    should be left to the parties concerned to discuss on the basis
    of current research," said Sweden's Foreign Minister Carl Bildt,
    in remarks posted on a Swedish government web-site.

    Bildt expressed regret, saying the parliamentary decision would hurt
    efforts to normalize relations between neighbors Turkey and Armenia.

    Their border has been closed for more then a decade.

    "The decision will not help the debate in Turkey, which has become
    increasingly open and tolerant as Turkey has developed closer relations
    with the European Union and made the democratic reforms these entail,"
    Bildt added.

    Turkey officially denies a genocide took place in the last days of
    the crumbling Ottoman Empire. Ankara argues instead that Muslim Turks
    and Christian Armenians massacred each other on the killing fields
    of World War I.

    But every year on April 24, Armenians around the world observe a
    remembrance day in honor of the genocide.

    Historians have extensively documented the Ottoman military's forced
    death-march of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Armenians into the
    Syrian desert in 1915. The massacres decimated the Armenian population
    in what is modern-day eastern Turkey.

    For years, the government in Yerevan and influential Armenian diaspora
    groups have mounted a campaign to convince other countries to formally
    label the events of 1915 as genocide.
    From: Baghdasarian
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