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Sweden, Turkey jointly denounce genocide vote

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  • Sweden, Turkey jointly denounce genocide vote

    Reuters
    March 13 2010


    Sweden, Turkey jointly denounce genocide vote
    Luke Baker
    SAARISELKA, Finland

    SAARISELKA, Finland (Reuters) - The foreign ministers of Turkey and
    Sweden condemned on Saturday a vote in the Swedish parliament that
    defined the early 20th-century killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks
    as genocide.

    Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, who is holding informal talks
    with foreign ministers including Turkey's Ahmet Davutoglu in northern
    Finland, said he was upset by the vote on Thursday and concerned it
    could affect Turkish-Armenian reconciliation.

    "It's regrettable because I think the politicization of history serves
    no useful purpose," he told reporters.

    "We are interested in the business of reconciliation, and decisions
    like that tend to raise tensions rather than lower tensions," he said.

    Sweden's parliament, by a vote of 131-130, backed a resolution that
    branded the killing of up to 1.5 million Christian Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks as a genocide, a term that Turkey resolutely rejects.

    Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt phoned his Turkish
    counterpart, Tayyip Erdogan, on Saturday and said he disagreed with
    the resolution, according to a statement on the Turkish prime
    minister's official website.

    The vote followed a decision by a committee of the U.S. House of
    Representatives the week before approving a nonbinding measure
    condemning the 1915 killings.

    In both cases Turkey responded angrily, withdrawing its ambassadors to
    Washington and Stockholm.

    The vote in the Swedish parliament was particularly galling for Turkey
    as Sweden is one of Ankara's strongest backers on issues such as
    Turkey's desire to join the European Union.

    Reinfeldt told Erdogan Sweden would continue to back Turkey's EU bid
    and that the vote was driven by domestic politics and would not affect
    bilateral relations, the statement said. Erdogan canceled a planned
    visit to Sweden this month, and the government recalled its ambassador
    from Stockholm.

    Davutoglu said Turkey would not stand by quietly if other nations took
    similar steps to describe the 1915 killings as a genocide and said it
    was pointless for countries to think they could put pressure on
    Turkey.

    "We will not be silent and we will not just show the usual attitudes.
    For each case we will have a different (set of) measures," he said.

    "What is the purpose of this? If the purpose is to make pressure,
    nobody can make pressure on Turkey. if the purpose is to get local
    domestic concerns raised, Turkish historical events should not be
    misused for these narrow issues."

    Davutoglu, the architect of Turkey's foreign policy of re-engaging
    with its neighbors, including Armenia, said it was wrong for
    parliaments to think they could define history purely via a vote.

    He also said he was concerned about the impact the vote could have on
    efforts by Armenia and Turkey to reconcile their history and find a
    political common ground at a time when they are making progress toward
    normalizing relations.

    (Editing by Matthew Jones)

    http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE62C0 Z520100313
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