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ANKARA: Turkish PM Davutoglu: Pope Joined Plots Against AK Party

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  • ANKARA: Turkish PM Davutoglu: Pope Joined Plots Against AK Party

    TURKISH PM DAVUTOGLU: POPE JOINED PLOTS AGAINST AK PARTY

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    April 15 2015

    Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and his wife, Sare Davutoglu, offer
    carnations to supporters during an AK Party election campaign meeting
    on Wednesday. (Photo: DHA)

    April 15, 2015, Wednesday/ 14:11:02/ TODAY'S ZAMAN / ISTANBUL

    The Turkish government stepped up its criticism of Pope Francis on
    Wednesday over his remarks characterizing the killings of Armenians
    during the final years of the Ottoman Empire as "genocide," with
    Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu accusing the pontiff of joining "plots"
    against his Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and Turkey.

    "An axis of evil is being created against us. An axis whose entire
    motivation is to hinder the AK Party is being formed," Davutoglu told
    a party meeting whose purpose was to introduce AK Party candidates for
    the June 7 parliamentary election and the party's election manifesto.

    He then targeted the AK Party's rivals, the Republican People's Party
    (CHP) and the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), criticizing
    the CHP's election campaign for being helped by a US-based strategic
    research consultancy and calling the HDP a "project" to hamper the
    AK Party's progress.

    "The pope has joined these plots against the AK Party and Turkey,"
    he said.

    Pope Francis angered Turkey when he publicly called the killing of
    Armenians "genocide." Turkey summoned the Vatican's ambassador to
    its Foreign Ministry and recalled its own back to Turkey after the
    pontiff's remarks on Sunday.

    Davutoglu said there were attempts to "convict" Turkey on the basis of
    "extremely unjust accusations" just ahead of the June 7 election.

    "I am addressing the pope: Those who escaped the genocide carried
    out by the Catholic world in Spain via the Inquisition found peace
    and safety in our just system," Davutoglu said.

    "We are ready to look into everything but we will not let our nation
    be insulted over history. We will not allow Turkey to be blackmailed
    through historical debates," the Turkish prime minister declared.

    First official statement from Vatican

    In the meantime, the Vatican made its first official statement on
    Wednesday following the pope's genocide remarks that angered Turkish
    officials. Vatican spokesman Rev. Federico Lombardi said the Holy See
    notes the Turks' reaction to the pope's remarks but has no intention
    of getting into a polemic.

    During a press conference on Wednesday, Lombardi also stated that the
    pope's remarks made President Recep Tayyip Erdogan bring up the idea
    of establishing a joint commission to debate the issue, adding that
    it's an interesting offer. After reporters pointed out that Erdogan's
    idea of a joint commission is not new, Lombardi said he knew that,
    adding that Turkey's denial of "genocide" is not new, either.

    Lombardi stressed that the pope always speaks directly and his remarks
    referring to "the first genocide of the 20th century" were in fact
    quoting a 2001 joint declaration by Pope John Paul ll and Catholicos
    Karekin ll, head of the Armenian Apostolic Church. Karekin ll was also
    present at Sunday's Mass, along with Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan.

    The Vatican spokesman said the pope's way of describing the 1915
    events is "clever" and asks for the issue to continue to be debated.

    The spokesman also stressed that the pope's intention was to prevent
    such tragic events reoccurring in the future, as well as writing a
    more accurate story.

    Lombardi said that for those who acknowledge what happened in 1915,
    the pope's remarks were to the point. He stressed that the pope also
    asked for reconciliation between Turkish and Armenian people.

    He said the Vatican will note Turkey's concerns and objections but
    will not get into a polemic.

    Meanwhile, a leading minority figure living in Ä°stanbul told
    Vatican Radio that the Christian community in Turkey is worried about
    bureaucratic reprisals against priests through such obstacles as not
    renewing residence permits.

    Speaking to Vatican Radio on Wednesday, Claudio Monge, head of the
    Dominican Study Institute of Ä°stanbul for Intercultural and Interfaith
    Dialogue, said after Pope Francis called the 1915 mass killings of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks a genocide, Turkey's Christian community
    may face bureaucratic obstacles. Monge said he found Turkey's reaction
    too harsh over the issue.

    The contentious issue of the 1915 killings of Ottoman Armenians has
    come under international spotlight once again as the centenary of the
    events approaches on April 24, injecting a new element of tension
    between Turkey and countries seeking recognition of the events as
    genocide.

    The Armenian diaspora claims that 1.5 million Armenians were
    systematically massacred by the Ottoman administration during World
    War I, and that this amounts to genocide. It demands an apology from
    Ankara. The Turkish government denies the charges.

    While accepting the killings of Armenians, Ankara says the number
    put forward by Armenian historians is inflated and the events took
    place amid civil unrest and inter-communal clashes and could not be
    characterized as genocide.

    Turkey also laments that hundreds of thousands of Muslim civilians
    were also killed during the unrest between the various communities
    in Anatolia, but that the international community only pays attention
    to the sufferings of one particular group.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/diplomacy_turkish-pm-davutoglu-pope-joined-plots-against-ak-party_378038.html

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