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  • Turkish PM Cancels Visit to Argentina

    Turkish PM Cancels Visit to Argentina

    May 31, 2010

    BUENOS AIRES - Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan cancelled his
    official trip to Argentina because he "felt offended" by the decision of
    Buenos Aires Mayor Mauricio Macri to cancel the inauguration of a monument
    paying homage to the founder of the Republic of Turkey, officials said.

    "He suspended his visit bothered by the unfulfilled promises of the city
    government regarding the inauguration of a monument in homage to the founder
    of the Republic of Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, which was scheduled for
    Monday, Foreign Minister Jorge Taiana said Saturday.

    "The Turkish foreign minister told me at noon (Saturday) that his government
    made the decision to cancel the visit because of the displeasure the Macri
    government's decision caused them," the organizer of the event, Taiana, told
    the official Telam news agency.

    The foreign minister lamented the fact that "the marches and countermarches
    of the city government caused this situation" because "it was a good
    opportunity to have the presence of a prime minister (from a country) making
    up the G-20," Taiana said.

    The Buenos Aires city government has been battling President Cristina
    Fernandez's administration, with the conflict intensifying over the past two
    weeks because of the indictment of Macri in a case where the judiciary is
    investigating illegal telephone tapping of politicians and businessmen.

    The Turkish government issued a statement Sunday in which it blamed
    Argentina's Armenian community for the cancellation of Erdogan's visit to
    Buenos Aires.

    "The reason for the cancellation of the visit to Argentina is that the
    Environment and Public Works Ministry of the autonomous government of Buenos
    Aires cancelled the permit to unveil a bust in honor of Ataturk in Jorge
    Newbury park because of the opposition of Armenian sectors," the Turkish
    Foreign Ministry said.

    Fernandez called Erdogan to apologize for the incident and to assure him
    that his government could not do anything more because of the municipal
    government's autonomy, the ministry said.

    Erdogan was scheduled to arrive Sunday in Buenos Aires from Santiago, Chile.

    Argentina is home to some 130,000 Armenians, the majority of them
    descendents of those expelled by the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor to
    Turkey, at the beginning of the 20th century.

    The Ottoman Empire ordered the deportation of about 1 million Armenians to
    the deserts of Syria at the start of World War 1 because it felt that they
    were fifth columnists for the enemy nation of Russia and the majority died
    there of hunger, disease or in massacres, deeds that Armenia and other
    countries refer to as the Armenian Genocide.

    Turkey, however, refuses to call those events genocide, contending that the
    Armenians also killed thousands of Muslims and out of fear that
    acknowledging the Turkish role in the situation would lead to economic and
    territorial claims.

    Most historians agree that Ataturk, who was an Ottoman general during World
    War I and led the 1919-1923 Turkish War for Independence, did not
    participate in the genocide.

    Copyright Latin American Herald Tribune - 2009 ©




    From: A. Papazian
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