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  • Turkey to launch offensive after row with France

    Oman Daily Observer
    Dec 23 2011


    Turkey to launch offensive after row with France

    Sun, 25 December 2011

    ANKARA - A French bill criminalising the denial of the disputed
    Armenian genocide by the Ottoman Empire in 1915 has galvinised Turkey
    to try to head off similar initiatives in future. Turkey's ambassadors
    from all over the world, gathering in the Turkish capital at an annual
    event, was holding a closed-door session on the subject.

    `We should all be prepared also because we will face an intensive
    campaign from the Armenian diaspora in 2015,' a senior Turkish
    diplomat said, referring to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian
    genocide. `And we should take history not from 1915 but from 1914 and
    explain what happened in the Balkans during that period,' said the
    diplomat.

    The French bill drew fury from the Turkish government which
    immediately recalled its ambassador from Paris and froze military and
    diplomatic ties with this country. Analysts here criticised the French
    legislation for undermining freedom of thought, but they also called
    on Ankara to adopt a proactive rather than reactive policy on the
    issue.

    `Unfortunately, we are constantly expecting people to bring the
    subject up,' Burcu Gultekin Punsmann, an analyst at Ankara-based
    think-tank TEPAV, said. `Now 2015 (the 100th anniversary) is the
    biggest deadline in front of us when the campaign will grow like a
    snowball rolling down hill,' she said.

    In 1915 and 1916, during World War I many Armenians died in Ottoman
    Turkey. Armenia says 1.5 million were killed in a genocide. Turkey
    says around 500,000 died in fighting after Armenians sided with
    Russian invaders.

    `Isn't it the time to confront with what happened in 1915,' Mehmet
    Tezkan wrote in Milliyet daily.

    `We have avoided any talk on 1915 for decades... One must be blind not
    to see what will happen four years later. Genocide will be recognised
    by the entire world in 2015 on its 100th anniversary.'

    Punsmann said Ankara could take a symbolic step and apologise for the
    1915 killings, like it did recently regarding the killings of Kurds in
    the 1930s.

    In November, Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan became the
    first Turkish premier to apologise for a bloody military campaign that
    killed more than 13,000 Kurds in the 1930s. - AFP



    http://main.omanobserver.om/node/76783

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