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  • Turkish PM's threat to expel Armenians

    The Australian
    March 19, 2010 Friday
    1 - All-round Country Edition

    Turkish PM's threat to expel Armenians


    The Ottoman genocide in World War I still haunts the modern state

    ISTANBUL: Turkey's Prime Minister has bought into an international row
    over the mass killing of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey by threatening to
    expel 100,000 Armenians living in the country.

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned yesterday that action could be taken if
    foreign parliaments continued to recognise the massacre of Armenians
    by Ottoman Turks a century ago as genocide.

    ``In my country there are 170,000 Armenians; 70,000 of them are
    citizens. We tolerate 100,000 more. So what am I going to do tomorrow?
    If necessary, I will tell the 100,000: OK, time to go back to your
    country. Why? They are not my citizens. I am not obliged to keep them
    in my country,'' he said while in London.

    He also warned the Armenian diaspora that its campaign to have the
    genocide recognised by foreign parliaments would jeopardise improved
    ties between Turkey and Armenia.

    Mr Erdogan was to have travelled on to Sweden but he cancelled the
    visit and recalled Turkey's ambassador after Sweden's parliament voted
    to join the nearly 20 countries accusing Ottoman Turks of genocide
    over the killing of up to 1.5 million Armenians during World War I.

    Ankara also recalled its ambassador to Washington this month after a
    US foreign affairs committee passed a genocide resolution. Armenia
    condemned Mr Erdogan's comments, saying it revived memories of the
    original killings -- many of which happened during deportations of
    Armenians accused of supporting the invading Russian army.

    ``These kinds of statements do not help to improve relations between
    our two states. When the Turkish Prime Minister allows himself to make
    such statements, it brings up memories of the events of 1915,''
    Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian said.

    Turkey rejects the accusations. Ankara insists that hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians and Muslim Turks died during civil strife in
    the final days of the Ottoman empire.

    Other countries are expected to pass genocide resolutions before the
    centenary of the killings in 2015. Many members of the European Union,
    which Turkey wishes to join, including France, Germany and Italy,
    already recognise the events as genocide. Even in Britain, which Mr
    Erdogan's aides say is ``too smart'' to get involved, parliament is
    expected to debate a genocide bill next month.

    The number of illegal Armenians in Turkey is a matter of debate, with
    a study conducted last year claiming the figure could be as low as
    10,000. Around half slipped into Turkey in 1988 in the aftermath of
    the devastating earthquake that hit Armenia. Others are exiles from
    Armenia's ailing post-Soviet economy.

    Turkish politicians have in the past threatened to throw out Armenians
    in retaliation for international recognition of the genocide but this
    is the first time the threat has come from the leader.

    His outburst probably had more to do with domestic political pressure
    than foreign policy. Having defied domestic opinion to champion a
    policy of reconciliation with Armenia, Mr Erdogan finds himself
    accused at home of enfeebling Turkey on the international stage.
    Elections are due by July next year and Mr Erdogan is fighting a
    rearguard action against nationalist parties on the Left and the
    Right.
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