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Turkey protests at Swedish `genocide' vote

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  • Turkey protests at Swedish `genocide' vote

    Turkey protests at Swedish `genocide' vote

    Financial Times
    March 12 2010

    By Delphine Strauss in Ankara and Andrew Ward in Stockholm

    March 12 2010 16:57

    Sweden scrambled to contain damage to ties with Turkey after its
    parliament labelled the Ottoman-era killings of Armenians as genocide,
    a week after a similar vote by a US congressional panel dealt a blow
    to relations between Ankara and Washington.

    The Swedish resolution, passed by a single vote on Thursday, will hurt
    ties with one of Turkey's strongest supporters in the European Union,
    when Ankara's relations with the bloc are already strained by the slow
    pace of accession talks.

    Turkey has recalled its ambassador in Stockholm for consultations, and
    cancelled a visit by Recep Tayyip Erdogan, prime minister, scheduled
    for next week. The visit was intended to promote trade and investment,
    and to discuss ideas for joint work on reconstruction in Afghanistan,
    a Turkish official said.

    Carl Bildt, Swedish foreign minister, said the vote did not reflect
    government policy and warned it would undermine a reconciliation
    between Turkey and Armenia - which had agreed a committee of
    historians should discuss the 1915 massacres.

    'The Government worked actively to make this clear to [parliament]
    before the debate,' he said. `The decision will not help the debate in
    Turkey, which has become increasingly open and tolerant.'

    Mr Bildt has been a vocal backer of Turkey's EU bid, warning opponents
    last November it would be a `mistake of historic proportions' to shut
    the door to Ankara.

    Turkey denies deportations and killings of ethnic Armenians
    constituted genocide, arguing many Turks also died in the chaos of the
    Ottoman empire's collapse. The Swedish resolution provoked additional
    outrage because it also said other Christian groups - Assyrians,
    Syrians, Chaldeans and Pontic Greeks, had suffered genocide.

    A sizeable Turkish community in Stockholm includes ethnic Assyrians as
    well as Kurds and Turks, and one concern is that the vote could
    inflame existing tensions between these groups.

    Yet in comparison with last week's strident reaction to the US vote,
    Turkish ministers appeared to downplay the significance of the
    decision in Stockholm.

    Egemen Bagis, Turkey's EU negotiator, said Turkey was `disappointed'
    by the decision. An earlier prime ministry statement said it `did not
    befit Turkish-Swedish relations and the close cooperation and
    friendship between our peoples', but blamed the outcome on lobbyists
    and pre-election political manoevres.

    `Turkish-Swedish relations will be different - it will take some time
    to come to a point of normalisation,' the official said, but
    acknowledged that the annual debate in the US, leading up to the
    president's commemoration of the massacres on April 24, was more
    explosive. `I don't think it will be as brutal as the US,' he said.

    Opposition politicians were more outspoken. Turkish media cited Kemal
    Anadol, the CHP party's deputy chairman, saying Sweden had no right to
    take such a decision having `opened a corridor for Hitler's army... to
    invade its neighbour Norway.'

    Sweden's ambassador to Ankara, Christer Asp, said Stockholm would work
    to limit damage from the dispute but acknowledged the risk of
    `consequences' for bilateral trade relations.


    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d44f9ece-2d ec-11df-a971-00144feabdc0.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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