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ANKARA: Who Loses, Who Wins Over Armenian Allegations?

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  • ANKARA: Who Loses, Who Wins Over Armenian Allegations?

    WHO LOSES, WHO WINS OVER ARMENIAN ALLEGATIONS?

    Hurriyet
    March 24 2010
    Turkey

    According to the Armenian press, the UK, Spain, Ukraine and Bulgaria
    will follow the Swedish parliament's approval of a 'genocide'
    resolution as a result of a worldwide campaign. Both Turkish and
    Foreign diplomats deny the reports. 'Such made-up reports are promoted
    on purpose ahead of April 24,' says a high-ranking Turkish diplomat
    The normalization protocols signed last October encouraged many to
    hope it was time to acknowledge that a genuine historical controversy
    could be resolved by scholars rather than politicians.

    Nowadays, recent debates in third countries' parliaments might endanger
    this picture although Turkish and Armenian politicians had finally
    agreed to establish a historical committee to examine the 1915 events.

    Foreign Ministry Spokesman Burak Ozugergin advocated that such moves
    by third countries would damage both bilateral relations and the
    normalization process with Armenia. "As you saw with recent examples
    [in the United States and Sweden], we reject the content and our
    bilateral relations are harmed," he said.

    Without giving details, Ozugergin said Turkey would take new steps
    seeking its rights on the global scene and "applying to international
    courts" was among the options.

    According to Armenian press, the United Kingdom, Spain, Ukraine and
    Bulgaria will follow the Swedish parliament's approval in an attempt
    make the Armenian campaign worldwide. "Such made-up reports are
    promoted on purpose ahead of April 24," said a high-ranking Turkish
    diplomat speaking on condition anonymity. Both Sweden's Prime Minister
    Fredrik Reinfeldt and Foreign Minister Carl Bildt apologized and
    criticized their parliaments' decisions, the source reminded.

    "The U.K. is our stronghold as Prime Minister (Gordon Brown) assured
    the national assembly will not hold such a resolution," the source
    said. "The Spanish government is against such a resolution and will
    not allow it to be discussed in the national parliament."

    Spain's government is working to torpedo efforts by its legislature
    to pass a resolution recognizing the Armenian "genocide," reported
    the Spanish ABC newspaper, according to Armenian news portal Asbarez
    on Tuesday.

    The regional assembly of Catalonia recognized the "Armenian genocide"
    on Feb. 26, but Catalan President Jose Montilla sent an apology letter
    to Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on March 9, saying he
    found the allegations baseless.

    Neither Bulgarian nor Ukrainian diplomatic sources confirmed that
    the Armenian "genocide" would be discussed in parliamentary sessions
    in coming weeks. "Our political cooperation with Turkey is vital for
    us, and we will not let such an outsider affect or deteriorate it," a
    Bulgarian diplomat told the Daily News. "The political system in Sofia
    is different than Washington, and there is no powerful Armenian lobby.

    Only some far-rights welcome such allegations."

    In an interview with the Hurriyet Daily News & Economic Review,
    Ukrainian Ambassador to Ankara Sergey Korsunsky denied the claim. 'We
    are not going to consider it in parliament, so this information is
    totally false. It is not on the agenda and will not be discussed."

    Asked if the Ukrainian parliament may consider it in the future as a
    result of the Armenian lobby, Korsunsky firmly replied, "No chance. It
    is not our issue."

    Yerevan claims the Ottoman army carried out genocide against more
    than a million Armenian citizens, but Ankara rejects "systematic
    genocide" and asserts mass killings happened on both sides under
    warlike conditions. The Turkish administration has long suggested
    opening archives to all researchers seeking the truth.

    Although Turkey was absolved of further responsibility for the
    consequences of the policies of the former Ottoman Empire according to
    the 1923 Lausanne Treaty, Armenians worldwide have initiated efforts
    for national and international recognition of an alleged genocide.

    The efforts began with the introduction of commemorative resolutions
    in the U.S. Congress in 1975, and in 1987 broader recognition was
    achieved with the adoption of a resolution by the European Parliament,
    which stated "the tragic events of 1915-1917 ... constitute genocide."

    In the following years, parliaments in a number of countries, including
    Belgium, Canada, Cyprus, France, Greece and Russia adopted resolutions
    recognizing "genocide."

    The U.S. is a stronghold of the Armenian lobby, and 42 of 50 states
    have recognized the "genocide," but the lobby has so far failed to
    have a resolution pass through Congress. As a result of strategic
    interests in the Middle East and a NATO alliance with Turkey, U.S.

    presidents to date have avoided using the word "genocide" on April
    24 when extending official condolences to the Armenian people on the
    day the events are annually commemorated.

    President Barack Obama made no exception last year despite his promises
    during the election campaign and asserted that any external effects
    might harm the normalization talks between Armenia and Turkey.

    Washington's pressure on Turkey to ratify protocols in the Turkish
    Parliament before April 24 faced a backlash in Ankara, and politicians
    vowed not bow to "U.S. blackmail."
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