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Paris And Ankara Locked In Armenian Genocide Dispute

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  • Paris And Ankara Locked In Armenian Genocide Dispute

    PARIS AND ANKARA LOCKED IN ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DISPUTE
    Igor Siletsky

    The Voice of Russia
    http://english.ruvr.ru/2011/12/23/62785574.html
    Dec 23 2011

    A large number of historians and 18 nations including Russia, Canada,
    Argentina, Venezuela, Chile and powers in the EU agree with Armenia
    that the Ottoman Empire slaughtered 1.5 million of its ethnic Armenians
    in 1915, leaving Turkey with hardly any Armenians left at all. They
    also agree that the slaughter amounted to genocide. Turkey disputes
    both the death toll and the nature of the 1915 events. It argues the
    killings were part of WWI, in which Turks also died, and had nothing
    to do with genocide.

    In the latest turn of the dispute, Turkey has recalled its Ambassador
    from France after the Lower House of the French Parliament passed
    a bill to make it a criminal offence to deny that the mass killing
    of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire almost 100 years ago amounted to
    genocide. Speaking in Istanbul Friday Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan also accused France of unleashing genocide during the
    independence war in Algeria, where French forces are believed to have
    killed 15 percent of the country's population.

    If the French bill is passed by the Senate, France will have as many
    as two genocide denial bans - one applying to the Nazi Holocaust
    of the European Jews, and the other to the Ottoman slaughter of
    the Armenians. Offenders will face at least a year in jail or a
    45-thousand-euro fine. By pushing through the latter ban, Sarkozy
    is delivering on his 2007 campaign pledges to France's influential
    Armenian community.

    Dr Boris Dolgov of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian
    Academy of Sciences also sees a link to France's next presidential
    elections:

    "The French government argues that Turkey cannot be allowed to join the
    European Union as long as it refuses to recognize its responsibility
    for the 1915 genocide. In fact, however, Sarkozy's party is seeking
    to boost his support base in the next presidential elections in 2012
    by an estimated half a million Armenian votes in France."

    Nor is Turkey prepared to climb down. We have an opinion from Dr
    Alexander Sotnichenko of the Moscow-based Institute of the Middle East:

    "Turkey is highly unlikely to admit that is has something like
    the Holocaust on its national conscience. Indeed, admitting its
    responsibility for the slaughter would revive Armenia's claims to the
    parts of Turkish territory that became Turkey under the 1921 peace
    treaties signed in Moscow and Kars. It would also lead to massive
    compensation claims."

    Turkey's current row is with France. The two previous ones were with
    Sweden and the United States. In its row with Sweden, Turkey recalled
    but subsequently returned its Ambassador to Stockholm. In its spat
    with the US, it recalled but subsequently returned its Ambassador
    to Washington. The recall followed a committee resolution in the US
    Congress to regard the 1915 slaughter as an instance of genocide. The
    return followed a speech by Barack Obama on Slaughtered Armenians
    Memory Day on April 24th in which he carefully avoided using the word
    'genocide'. Observers believe the current row between Turkey and
    France will eventually follow a similar scenario.

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