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Turkey accuses Pope of 'prejudice' over Armenian 'genocide'

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  • Turkey accuses Pope of 'prejudice' over Armenian 'genocide'

    Turkey accuses Pope of 'prejudice' over Armenian 'genocide'

    Daniel Dombey in Istanbul and James Politi in Rome
    12/4/15


    Turkey reacted angrily after Pope Francis called the Ottoman-era
    slaughter of Armenians "the first genocide of the 20th century", with
    Ankara accusing the pontiff of distorting history and speaking out of
    prejudice.

    The Turkish government said it was recalling its ambassador to the
    Vatican after it earlier summoned the papal envoy to complain. It said
    the Pope's statement about the killings -- the centenary of which comes
    this month -- was "based on prejudice, distorts history and reduces
    sufferings in Anatolia during the first world war to members of just
    one religion".

    "Religious offices are not places through which hatred and animosity
    are fuelled by unfounded allegations," Mevlut Cavusolgu, Turkey's
    foreign minister, said on Twitter. "The Pope's statement, which is out
    of touch with both historical facts and legal basis, is simply
    unacceptable."

    At a Sunday mass in the Vatican attended by Serzh Sargsyan, the
    Armenian president, the Pope depicted the killings as the precursor of
    attempts to wipe out whole ethnic groups by the Nazis and the Soviets,
    as well as massacres in countries such as Rwanda and Bosnia.

    "Concealing or denying evil is like allowing a wound to keep bleeding
    without bandaging it," he said. Turkey has yet to make any official
    response to his statement. Although both the Pope and his predecessor
    John Paul II had used the word "genocide" before to describe the
    killing of up 1.5m Armenians during the last years of the Ottoman
    Empire, they di not do it in as official public speech. This made the
    remarks all the more surprising to officials, particularly since the
    Pope paid an apparently friendly trip to Turkey last year.

    Pope Francis's remarks come as the 78-year old Argentine pontiff has
    become worried -- and vocal -- about the persecution of Christians,
    particularly by Muslims. This month, jihadi militants attacked a
    university in Kenya, focusing on Christians and killing 148 people.
    Christians have routinely been the object of violence by members of
    the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis). "So many of our
    defenceless brothers and sisters...on account of their faith in Christ
    or their ethnic origin, are publicly and ruthlessly put to death --
    decapitated, crucified, burnt alive -- or forced to leave their
    homeland," the Pope said.

    Ankara says it is not yet established that the deaths amounted to
    genocide -- even though Raphael Lemkin, the scholar who coined the
    word, referred explicitly to the killings as genocide.

    The issue is set to attract more debate in the run-up to April 24, the
    official day of commemoration of the killings, when presidents
    François Hollande of France and Vladimir Putin of Russia are expected
    to travel to Yerevan, the Armenian capital. Turkey has chosen the same
    date to mark the centenary of the first world war Gallipoli battles
    and figures including Britain's princes Charles and Harry are due to
    attend.

    When Turkey's president Recep Tayyip Erdogan invited Mr Sargsyan to
    attend the Gallipoli events, the Armenian president labelled it a
    "cynical attempt" to distract attention from the April 24
    commemoration.

    Although Turkey's stance on the killings has previously strained
    relations with countries such as the US and France, Turkish officials
    are hopeful that they can avoid similar rifts in the year of the
    centenary.

    After a recent trip to Washington to discuss the issue, a group of
    ruling party MPs returned to Turkey confident that the Republican
    congressional leadership was less likely than its Democratic
    predecessors to allow resolutions marking the killings as genocide to
    proceed.

    In Turkey itself, Mr Erdogan went further than any previous leader
    when last year he recognised the "particular significance" of April 24
    "for our Armenian citizens and for all Armenians around the world".

    Until recently, references to an Armenian genocide risked prosecution
    in Turkey, but Mr Erdogan has argued that "expressing different
    opinions and thoughts freely on the events of 1915" was a requirement
    of a modern pluralist democracy.

    Books with the word genocide in the title have now been published in
    Turkey -- something that was previously unthinkable. Ethnic Armenian
    Turks are running for both the ruling AK party and the main opposition
    parties in June general elections, while another serves as chief
    adviser to Ahmet Davutoglu, Turkey's prime minister.

    Pope Francis has in the past praised the shift towards conciliatory
    language by Mr Erdogan but his comments on Sunday suggest concern
    inside the Vatican that the Turkish position may be hardening again.

    The Pope met Armenia's Catholic bishops last week, but avoided using
    the term genocide in describing the 1915 slaughter -- rather calling it
    "martyrdom and persecution". He also asked for "concrete gestures of
    reconciliation" between the two countries.

    Yet, Ankara's position remains that a joint historical commission
    should be set up to study the events of 1915 -- a commission Armenia
    argues is wholly unnecessary given the documentation that already
    exists. Efforts to establish normal diplomatic relations between
    Turkey and Armenia also ran out of steam several years ago.


    http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/d1876b7c-e10b-11e4-8b1a-00144feab7de.html#axzz3X8HNtAmy

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