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ANKARA: Turkey "Very Disturbed" By Armenian Allegations - Turkish Pr

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  • ANKARA: Turkey "Very Disturbed" By Armenian Allegations - Turkish Pr

    TURKEY "VERY DISTURBED" BY ARMENIAN ALLEGATIONS - TURKISH PREMIER

    Anadolu Agency
    March 16 2010
    Turkey

    London, 16 March: Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who is on
    an official trip to the UK, called on the international community to
    let historians judge history rather than legislators.

    Erdogan's call on Tuesday [16 March] came in the eve of an critical
    motion in the British House of Commons on an Armenian bill recognizing
    the tragic events of 1915 - which took place shortly before the fall
    of the Ottoman Empire - as genocide.

    Similar resolutions were adopted recently in the US House committee
    on foreign affairs and the Swedish parliament, straining relations
    between Turkey and these countries.

    Turkey, which strongly rejects the genocide allegations and regards the
    events as civil strife in wartime which claimed lives of many Turks
    and Armenians, severely criticized the resolutions warning that it
    would jeopardize the historic rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia.

    In his address to the Turkey-England business forum, Erdogan warned
    that such bills jeopardized the normalization process between Turkey
    and Armenia.

    He welcomed British Justice Minister Jack Straw's remarks reassuring
    that the bill would not be adopted by the House of Commons.

    Straw, who addressed the same forum earlier, said only one out of
    651 members of the House of Commons backed the bill, noting that both
    the opposition and the government was against the bill.

    Erdogan said Turkey was very disturbed by efforts to accuse Turkey
    based on episodes in history which were not yet fully brought to light.

    He said Turkey opened all its archives to historians, calling all
    related parties and third countries to do the same.

    "We want historians to study and clarify the said events. This is
    what needs to be done," said Erdogan.

    Erdogan said the resolutions on Armenian allegations were politically
    motivated and were far from reason, logic and historic facts.

    Commenting on Swedish Premier Fredrick Reinfeldt's recent remarks on
    the adoption of the Armenian bill in the Swedish parliament, Erdogan
    said he saw the remarks as an apology and an expression of regret,
    and intention to fix their mistake.
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