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President Of The European Parliament Gives A Public Lesson To Turkis

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  • President Of The European Parliament Gives A Public Lesson To Turkis

    PRESIDENT OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT GIVES A PUBLIC LESSON TO TURKISH MINSTER

    Mediamax News Agency
    Feb 8 2012
    Armenia

    Yerevan/Mediamax/. The President of the European Parliament Martin
    Schulz advises Turkey to "face his own history".

    Martin Schulz said this at a joint press conference with Turkish
    Minister for the EU Affairs and Chief Negotiator Egemen Bagis,
    Mediamax reports. The Zurich public prosecutor's office has launched
    an initial investigation into Egemen Bagis over the public denial of
    the Armenian Genocide.

    "You should face your own history and you should allow independent
    inquiries about your history. If the independent inquires come to
    the conclusion that it was Genocide, you should recognize it," said
    Martin Schultz.

    Egemen Bagis said that "in 2005, the Turkish Prime Minister wrote in
    a letter to the Armenian President to which the Armenian side so far
    has not responded positively.

    He also said that "Turkey is ready to establish international committee
    of historians and scholars and to accept their findings, as long as
    those findings are based on archives not only of Turkey and Armenia,
    but also other countries involved, including Germany who was one of
    the Turkish best allies in 1915. Also UK, Russia, France, USA."

    Mediamax notes that it was not accidental that Bagis mentioned Germany
    in a special context, as the President of the European Parliament
    Martin Schulz is German.

    "We are politicians; we have responsibilities in shaping the future,
    not the past. Politicians should not steal the role of the historians
    who should study history and make judgments," Bagis added.

    However, Martin Schultz gave a different recommendation:

    "As German and especially as German president of multinational
    parliament, I have to live every day with our past, which is not easy
    past. It is a very difficult one. Demons of the past are lasting until
    today, every day I am confronted with the past of my country. But my
    country, and I am proud of this, during six decades is facing its own
    history; is recognizing not to be guilty - because our generation is
    not guilty for the crimes committed in the past. But we are responsible
    to avoid that it could happen once more. To be as open as possible
    to the past is the best way to the future."

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