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ISTANBUL: Swedish PM apologizes to Erdogan after Armenian resolution

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  • ISTANBUL: Swedish PM apologizes to Erdogan after Armenian resolution

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    March 14 2010

    Swedish PM Reinfeldt apologizes to ErdoÄ?an after Armenian resolution


    Sunday, March 14, 2010
    ANKARA - Hürriyet Daily News

    Swedish Prime Minister Frederick Reinfeldt called his Turkish
    counterpart late Saturday to apologize for a vote in the Swedish
    parliament saying the Ottoman Empire committed `genocide' against
    Armenians and other minorities in 1915.

    `The government is absolutely against the resolution, which was
    ratified as a result of domestic policy, and it will have no sanction
    or exercise power,' Reinfeldt said, according to a statement issued by
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an's office.

    The controversial 131-130 vote came as a blow to the `excellent
    diplomatic relations' between the countries, Turkish diplomats said.

    `We will not allow this [resolution] to affect bilateral relations in
    a negative way,' Reinfeldt said. `Sweden will continue supporting
    Turkey, especially in its EU accession process, as always. We are
    ready to do our best to protect the existing relations from such a
    baseless decision made by only one extra vote.'

    In reply, ErdoÄ?an said politicians cannot re-shape history.

    `Turkey presented its archives to historians, scientists and
    researchers from all sides,' he said. `The political attempts, results
    of ignorance and prejudice, disrupt both scientific research and
    Turkey's peace efforts in the region.'

    Expressing his disappointment with the resolution, ErdoÄ?an urged the
    Swedish government `to take steps to remedy this mistake.'

    The resolution says that Armenians and other Christian minorities were
    subjected to genocide during World War I while the Ottoman Empire fell
    apart. Turkey denies any systematic massacre or genocide and asserts
    that people from both Turkish and Armenian communities were killed in
    civil strife during wartime.

    In protest of the Swedish parliament's move, ErdoÄ?an has canceled a
    planned visit to Stockholm, and Turkish Ambassador Zergün Korutürk has
    been recalled to Ankara.

    Gates responds to `genocide' vote

    U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates meanwhile said Saturday that the
    United States felt very strongly that passing of a similar resolution
    in a congressional committee was a mistake.

    A resolution of that kind could be very damaging to U.S.-Turkey
    relations, Gates said.

    `We certainly hope that Congress and the House of Representatives take
    this measure no further,' Gates said during an interview with the
    al-Arabia TV channel.

    Saying he was worried about the resolution, Gates noted that only one
    committee of the House of Representatives had voted on the bill
    labeling the events of 1915 as `genocide.'

    `Turkey and Armenia are making progress toward a reconciliation,'
    Gates said, adding that the protocols between the two countries had
    been drafted with that goal in mind and that the United States
    supports that process.
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