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Turkey protests Sweden's 'genocide' vote

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  • Turkey protests Sweden's 'genocide' vote

    Agence France Presse
    March 12, 2010 Friday 12:15 PM GMT

    Turkey protests Sweden's 'genocide' vote

    Ankara, March 12 2010


    Turkey summoned the Swedish ambassador Friday to protest after the
    Swedish parliament recognized the massacres of Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks as genocide, only days after a similar vote by a US
    Congressional panel.

    "We conveyed our unease to the Swedish side," a diplomat told AFP on
    condition of anonymity after Ambassador Christer Asp met with the
    ministry's deputy undersecretary.

    Ankara expects Sweden to "take serious steps to compensate" for the
    decision which will "not benefit and may even harm" bilateral ties,
    the diplomat added.

    Asp said in televised remarks after the meeting that Thursday's
    decision was not binding for the government and vowed to maintain the
    "strong, friendly" ties with Turkey.

    Going against the government's advice, the Swedish parliament voted
    with a narrow margin Thursday to recognize the "genocide of Armenians"
    and other Christian ethnic groups during the breakup of the Ottoman
    Empire, Turkey's predecessor.

    Ankara quickly denounced the vote, recalled its ambassador from
    Stockholm and cancelled next week's visit by Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan to Sweden for a summit between the two countries.

    "Our people and our government reject this decision based upon major
    errors and without foundation," said a statement from Erdogan's
    office, charging that the vote was based on "domestic political
    calculations" in light of elections in September this year.

    In comments late Thursday, President Abdullah Gul said the Swedish
    parliament's decision had "no value in our eyes."

    The Swedish vote came a week after the US House Foreign Affairs
    Committee narrowly approved a non-binding resolution branding the
    massacres of Armenians a genocide, prompting Ankara to recall its
    ambassador.

    In comments published in newspapers Friday, the Turkish ambassador to
    Stockholm, Zergun Koruturk, lamented that the vote had delievered a
    major blow to "excellent ties" which she said were advancing towards a
    strategic partnership.

    "It will not be easy to repair the damage," said Koruturk, who was
    expected to return to Turkey Friday.

    Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said after the vote that it was a
    "mistake to politicise history" and vowed that the government's
    position remains unchanged.

    Sweden is among the few countries which openly support Turkey's
    troubled bid to join the European Union.

    The country's top-selling broadsheet newspaper Dagens Nyheter
    described the vote as a "very unfortunate decision".

    "It is not up to the Swedish parliament nor to any parliamentary
    assembly to vote on something which is historically true or not," said
    the paper in an editorial Friday.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu was expected to meet Bildt
    Friday or Saturday on the sidelines of an informal European gathering
    in Finland, a diplomatic source said.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kin were killed in a
    systematic campaign of extermination during World War I as the Ottoman
    Empire fell apart.

    Turkey categorically rejects the genocide label and says the toll is
    grossly inflated, arguing that between 300,000 and 500,000 Armenians
    and at least as many Turks were killed in civil strife when Armenians
    rose up for independence and sided with invading Russian forces.

    But much to Ankara's ire, parliaments in several countries have
    recognized the killings as genocide.

    Setting up an independent body of historians to study the events is
    one of the measures foreseen under a historic deal Turkey and Armenia
    signed in October to establish diplomatic relations and open their
    border.

    But the process has already stalled, with Ankara accusing Yerevan of
    trying to change the terms of the deal and Yerevan charging that
    Ankara is not committed to ratifying the accord.

    burs-han/lt
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