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Turkey Has Called Off Its Ambassador To Sweden And Prime Minister Ha

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  • Turkey Has Called Off Its Ambassador To Sweden And Prime Minister Ha

    TURKEY HAS CALLED OFF ITS AMBASSADOR TO SWEDEN AND PRIME MINISTER HAS CANCELLED HIS VISIT TO SWEDEN

    ITAR-TASS
    March 12 2010
    Russia

    ANKARA, March 11 (Itar-Tass) - Turkey has called off its ambassador
    to Sweden and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has cancelled a
    previously planned visit to Sweden.

    The measures came as a reaction to the Swedish parliament's decision
    earlier in the day to recognize the genocide of ethnic Armenians,
    Assyrians and Pontic Greeks in the Ottoman Empire in 1915.

    The office of the Prime Minister said in a special statement Turkey
    condemns the Swedish resolution. The Turkish-Swedish business forum
    and the Prime Minister's visit to Stockholm are henceforth cancelled,
    it said.

    The statement says the ambassador has been called off for
    consultations.

    It accuses the Swedish MPs of a political calculus behind their
    resolution, saying it has been necessitated by political reasons and
    especially by the elections due in Sweden in September.

    The Swedish parliament's move stands in controversy with the relations
    of friendship and close cooperation existing between the two countries
    and their peoples, the statement says.

    The resolution on genocide was put up for voting in Swedish parliament,
    the Rigksdag, Thursday morning and its discussion continued until
    almost the end of the workday.

    The draft was submitted by opposition forces - the Left Party, the
    Green Party, the Social Democratic Workers' Party and several MPs
    from the Liberal People's Party and the Christian Democratic Party.

    The resolution was endorsed by a slight majority of votes. It
    recognizes the extermination of 1.5 million Armenians, 250,000 to
    500,000 Assyrians and about 350,000 Pontic Greeks in the last phase
    of Turkey's imperial history.

    The opponents of recognition of the genocide came up with explanations
    for their position.

    One of them, Gustav Blix of the Moderate Coalition Party, told Radio
    Sweden that it is not politicians that should write history.

    He indicated that decisions on such knotty issues should be taken by
    international law agencies.

    Blix fears the recognition of genocide may hamper the incipient
    process of rapprochement between Armenia and Turkey.
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