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Turkey PM's Armenian Advisor Resigns Ahead Of Centenary

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  • Turkey PM's Armenian Advisor Resigns Ahead Of Centenary

    TURKEY PM'S ARMENIAN ADVISOR RESIGNS AHEAD OF CENTENARY

    Gulf News, UAE
    April 16 2015

    He faced criticism by some in the government for reiterating his view
    that First World War killings amounted to genocide

    Istanbul: Etyen Mahcupyan, a well-known ethnic Armenian writer, has
    retired as chief adviser to Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu as Turkey
    prepares for the 100th anniversary of the massacre of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turkish forces.

    The centenary has stirred controversy in Turkey, with President
    Tayyip Erdogan rebuffing statements from Pope Francis and the European
    Parliament this week that the First World War killings of up to 1.5
    million Armenians amounted to genocide.

    Mahcupyan, whose appointment last October drew praise as a sign of
    Turkey's commitment to minority rights, said his departure had nothing
    to do with the row. He said he retired in March after turning 65,
    the mandatory retirement age for civil servants, and still advises
    Davutoglu informally.

    But the announcement of his departure, which was confirmed by the
    prime minister's office on Thursday, came as he faced criticism
    by some in the government for reiterating his long-held view that
    the 1915 killings amounted to genocide. It was not clear why the
    announcement took more than a month.

    "Mr Mahcupyan is no longer the chief adviser of our prime minister.

    His duties have ceased due to his retirement," a source in Davutoglu's
    office said.

    "He was a figure whom our prime minister has consulted with and valued
    prior to him becoming an adviser, and this relationship will continue.

    But he no longer holds the official title of chief adviser."

    Earlier on Thursday, Turkey's EU affairs minister, Volkan Bozkir,
    said Mahcupyan's view that a genocide took place 100 years ago was
    unsuitable for a prime minister's adviser.

    "I consider his statement a personal one, made as a Turkish citizen.

    Of course, this perspective does not become a Turkish citizen either.

    Perhaps he will have a chance to reconsider his assessment," Bozkir
    said in an interview with CNN Turk.

    Muslim Turkey agrees that Christian Armenians were killed in clashes
    with Ottoman forces that began on April 24, 1915, when large numbers
    of Armenians lived in the empire ruled by Istanbul, but denies that
    this amounted to genocide.

    Armenia, most Western scholars and several foreign legislatures refer
    to the mass killings as genocide.

    On Sunday, Pope Francis triggered a diplomatic row with Ankara by
    calling the killings "the first genocide of the 20th century". His
    remarks prompted Turkey to summon the Vatican's ambassador and to
    recall its own.

    http://gulfnews.com/news/asia/turkey-pm-s-armenian-advisor-resigns-ahead-of-centenary-1.1493478




    From: A. Papazian
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