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  • ANKARA: Turkish Armenians: 1915 events were a fight between friends

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 27 2010

    Turkish Armenians: 1915 events were a fight between friends


    Turkish Armenians urged the powerful Armenian diaspora yesterday to
    stop their efforts to win global recognition for Armenian genocide
    claims, saying that what happened in Anatolia during World War I was a
    `fight between two good friends.'


    Berdos Å?irinoÄ?lu, a representative of the Armenian community and
    president of the board of trustees of the Armenian Surp Pırgiç
    Hospital, told reporters after talks with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    ErdoÄ?an that no good could come out of bringing up what happened a
    century ago and that there were losses on both sides as Turks and
    Armenians -- antagonized by third parties -- fought against each
    other.

    `This was 100 years ago. There is no point in digging further into the
    past. I cannot understand why some people try to keep it [the debate]
    open,' added Å?irinoÄ?lu, who said his own grandfather died in the 1915
    events. `There is no need to call the events genocide either.'

    Å?irinoÄ?lu and Herman Balyon, the vice chairman of the executive board
    of the Armenian hospital, met with ErdoÄ?an after the prime minister
    caused widespread anger by saying that Turkey could expel 100,000
    illegal Armenian immigrants if foreign parliaments continue to pass
    resolutions endorsing the genocide claims.

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed during World
    War I in a systematic genocide campaign at the hands of the Ottoman
    Empire. Turkey categorically rejects the charges, saying the death
    toll is inflated and that Turks were also killed as Armenians revolted
    against the Ottoman Empire in collaboration with Russian forces for an
    independent state in eastern Anatolia. The US House Committee on
    Foreign Affairs and the Swedish Parliament recently passed resolutions
    endorsing the Armenian version of that period of history, angering
    Turkey.

    When ErdoÄ?an said Turkey could deport 100,000 illegal Armenian
    immigrants, he drew ire from human rights groups, who said this
    amounts to using destitute people in political bargaining. The number
    was also contested. A recent study showed the number of Armenians
    illegally residing in Turkey as between 10,000 and 12,000.

    Å?irinoÄ?lu took the blame for the mix-up. `We gave the figures to the
    prime minister. Since he trusted us deeply, he did not check it with
    other sources. We apologize for this,' he said, adding that the
    correct figure was about 20,000.

    Tensions over the genocide claims may go up as US President Barack
    Obama prepares to issue an annual statement on April 24, the date
    which Armenians say marks the anniversary of the beginning of the
    genocide. Despite his pre-election promises, Obama refrained from
    using the word genocide in his message last year in order not to harm
    a process of reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia. The two
    countries signed two protocols last October on normalizing their ties.
    The steps envisioned in the protocols include the creation of a
    commission of historians to study the early 20th century events.

    When asked if ErdoÄ?an had asked for support from the Armenian
    community for the reconciliation process with Armenia, Å?irinoÄ?lu said
    there was no such request. `The prime minister is already doing what
    is necessary to solve problems faced by minorities, for which we are
    thankful to him,' he said. Å?irinoÄ?lu was also hopeful that the
    reconciliation process would succeed. `I expect both Turkey and
    Armenia will learn from history. This process will be concluded
    swiftly,' he said.

    He also said the Armenians felt safe in Turkey and that they had no
    complaint to that effect. When asked how the Armenian diaspora reacts
    to his remarks, Å?irinoÄ?lu said diaspora representatives should come
    and see how Armenians live in Turkey. `Those people who have been away
    from their country for a long time should come and see Armenian
    property and schools, they should see how Armenians live in Turkey and
    then they should decide,' he said.

    The question of what happened to Ottoman Armenians is a sensitive
    issue in Turkey. Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who called
    the killings genocide, was killed by a teenage gunman in 2007. His
    assassin said he had killed Dink because he had insulted Turks.

    Many Turks felt frustrated because the Armenian version of history,
    which is accepted widely in the West, fails to mention Turks and Kurds
    massacred by Armenian gangs. The European Union, which Ankara aspires
    to join, urges Turkey to ease laws restricting freedom of speech,
    under which one can land in court for calling the events genocide.

    Å?irinoÄ?lu said most of the 1.5 million Armenians who were living in
    Anatolia when the killings began had migrated to other countries --
    Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, the United States, France and others. `I am not
    saying nothing happened, but there is no benefit in digging deeper
    into the past. If we do this, our future will remain in the dark,' he
    said.



    27 March 2010, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN Ä°STANBUL

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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