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AFP: Turkish PM steps back from Armenian workers expulsion threat

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  • AFP: Turkish PM steps back from Armenian workers expulsion threat

    Agence France Presse
    March 20, 2010 Saturday 11:35 AM GMT



    Turkish PM steps back from Armenian workers expulsion threat

    ISTANBUL, March 20 2010


    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Saturday he had no
    immediate plans to expel illegal Armenian workers after his threat to
    do so sparked a barrage of criticism at home and abroad.

    Erdogan however urged Western countries to stop branding the massacres
    of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as "genocide," slamming such
    moves as attempts to "tarnish" Turkey's honour and "meddle" in its
    ties with Armenia.

    The Turkish media and rights groups accused Erdogan of treating
    illegal Armenians as a pawn in Ankara's protests after his threat
    earlier this week to deport thousands of impoverished Armenians
    working illegally in Turkey.

    But Erdogan said his remarks were aimed "at drawing the world's
    attention to our tolerant approach towards those people" and did not
    mean that "we will take such a step immediately."

    "What I am saying is that those who pass these baseless (genocide)
    resolutions... should see the humanitarian perspective from which we
    look at the problem... They should not meddle in our ties with our
    neighbours," Erdogan told a gathering of Turkish artists.

    "We are not speaking about citizens or immigrants or refugees. Still,
    we have shown good will. We have displayed tolerance towards some
    needy people... and we will continue to do so," he said.

    But "we cannot stay silent when some people take actions to tarnish
    the honour of Turkey and the Turkish people, while we are displaying
    all kind of good will and tolerance," he added.

    Erdogan blamed the "genocide" resolutions on the influential Armenian
    diaspora in the West and "those who use them."

    Earlier this month, the US House Foreign Affairs Committee approved a
    non-binding resolution branding the World War I massacres a genocide,
    and Sweden's parliament followed suit last week, infuriating Ankara.

    In an interview with the BBC Turkish service Tuesday, Erdogan
    threatened to expel illegal Armenian workers if foreign parliaments
    continued to pass such resolutions, prompting a condemnation from
    Yerevan and harsh domestic criticism that his remarks damaged already
    troubled peace efforts with Armenia.

    Erdogan put the number of illegal Armenians in Turkey at 100,000.

    Researchers however say that the Turkish authorities tend to inflate
    the figures to put pressure on Armenia, estimating the number between
    10,000 to 20,000.

    Following Swiss-brokered talks to end decades of enmity, Turkey and
    Armenia signed a deal in October to establish diplomatic ties and open
    their border. But the process has already hit snags, with both sides
    accusing the other of lacking commitment to the deal.

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

    Turkey counters that between 300,000 and 500,000 Armenians and at
    least as many Turks perished in civil strife when Armenians rose up
    against their Ottoman rulers and sided with invading Russian forces.

    Several other countries, notably France, have also recognised the
    killings as genocide.
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