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ISTANBUL: Leave history alone, Turkish-Armenians tell outsiders

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  • ISTANBUL: Leave history alone, Turkish-Armenians tell outsiders

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 14 2010

    Leave history alone, Turkish-Armenians tell outsiders


    Many Turkish citizens of Armenian descent have called on third
    countries not to involve themselves in historical disagreements
    between Turkey and Armenia while the two countries are in the process
    of resolving these issues and normalizing their once-tense bilateral
    relations.

    Speaking to Sunday's Zaman, many Turkish-Armenians have, in
    particular, denounced the approval of US and Swedish resolutions
    recognizing the killings of Armenians in 1915 as `genocide,' which
    they said would not help either side in the long-disputed problem.

    Nazar Ã-zsahakyan, chairman of Surp Yerits Mangans Armenian Church
    Foundation in Ä°stanbul, stated that he shared the feelings of Turks
    when he first heard about the passage of the resolutions. `I reacted
    to those resolutions the same way Turks did,' he said, adding that he
    was not alone as a Turkish citizen of Armenian descent opposing any
    third country's usage of the issue as a political tool. `All of the
    Armenians whom I have contacted think just like me,' he stated.

    On March 4, the US House of Representatives Committee on Foreign
    Affairs voted 23-22 to approve the non-binding resolution, clearing it
    for consideration by the full House. But it is unclear whether the
    measure will get a floor vote. The adoption of the resolution,
    however, irked many and stirred wide reaction in Turkey, which
    vehemently rejects the allegations and regards the events as civil
    strife in wartime that claimed the lives of many Turks and other
    residents of the region at the time as well as Armenians.

    The Swedish Parliament recognized the Armenian genocide with a vote of
    131 to 130, only a week after the US committee's vote, further
    aggravating Turkey.

    Kayseri Surp Krikor Lusarovic Armenian Church Foundation Chairman
    Zadik Toker joined Ã-zsahakyan in taking a critical stand against the
    US resolution and reiterated that the decision has discomfited the
    Armenian community living in Turkey. `We don't appreciate such moves,
    and the Armenians living in Turkey are uncomfortable with them,' said
    Toker. He added that bilateral issues should be resolved without the
    interference of third parties as has particularly been the case with
    the World War I-era Armenian killings. `Turkey and Armenia should
    resolve their problems on their own through meetings with each other
    and exchanging views,' he added.

    The decades-long dispute is a highly sensitive issue in Turkey.
    Following the adoption of the resolution in the US, Foreign Minister
    Ahmet DavutoÄ?lu told reporters that the issue was a matter of honor
    for the country and thus they would assess what measures to take.
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an and President Abdullah Gül have
    denounced the US and Swedish moves as well. Turkish envoys in
    Washington and Stockholm were recalled immediately after the votes in
    a powerful reaction to the governments of both countries.

    Etyen Mahçupyan, editor-in-chief of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian
    weekly Agos, argued that states should not take part in such
    discussions as primary actors. `Both US and Swedish votes were actions
    whose aims were unclear. I find them meaningful neither for
    understanding the past nor for setting the future,' said the Armenian
    author and journalist, adding that he did not approve of the Turkish
    government's reaction to the moves, either. `I categorically reject
    states' involvement in such matters. They should never become actors
    in similar discussions. Otherwise, we cannot avoid politicization
    there,' he asserted.

    Markar Esayan, a deputy editor and a columnist of the liberal Taraf
    daily, joined Mahçupyan in dismissing state involvement in matters
    related to past sufferings. `Even if I am a citizen of Armenian
    descent, I regard this problem as a citizen of Turkey as much as I
    regard it an ethical and humane issue. I rise against the fact that
    the sufferings of people to whom I belong are being used as a factor
    of pressure on the country to which I belong,' he wrote in his column
    on March 4, even before the US vote, predicting that it was going to
    be in favor of the Armenian resolution.

    Though the exact figure is unclear, it is estimated that there are up
    to 70,000 Armenians in Turkey, most of them living in Ä°stanbul, while
    the rest are scattered across the country. There are also undocumented
    Armenian workers who left their homeland to seek better lives in
    Turkey. A study conducted by the Eurasia Partnership Foundation last
    year suggested that the number of undocumented Armenian workers was
    around 12,000.


    14 March 2010, Sunday
    MUSTAFA EDIB YILMAZ Ä°STANBUL
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