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Turkish Premier Says European Stance On Armenian Genocide Reflects R

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  • Turkish Premier Says European Stance On Armenian Genocide Reflects R

    TURKISH PREMIER SAYS EUROPEAN STANCE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE REFLECTS RACISM

    The New York Times
    April 17 2015

    By CEYLAN YEGINSUAPRIL 17, 2015

    ISTANBUL -- Turkey's prime minister on Friday accused Europe of showing
    signs of racism after the European Parliament passed a resolution
    calling on his government to recognize the mass killings of Armenians
    in the collapsing Ottoman Empire as genocide.

    Although Turkey vowed to disregard the resolution, government officials
    have lashed out at the European Parliament, the legislature of the
    European Union, accusing it of contriving obstacles to relations
    with Turkey. But the remarks by the prime minister, Ahmet Davutoglu,
    went further.

    "The European Parliament should not take decisions that would result
    in hatred toward a certain religion or ethnic group if it wants to
    contribute to peace," Mr. Davutoglu told reporters in Ankara. "This
    issue is now beyond the Turkish-Armenian issue. It's a new reflection
    of the racism in Europe."

    The tensions came a week before Armenians across the world plan to
    commemorate the 100th anniversary of what historians recognize as
    the first genocide of the 20th century. Armenians say that as many
    as 1.5 million Armenian Christians were systematically killed from
    1915 to 1923 through mass slaughter, starvation and deportation into
    the Syrian desert.

    While Turkey acknowledges that atrocities took place, it refuses to
    take responsibility for the deaths, claiming that a large number of
    people -- many of them Turks -- were also killed as a result of civil
    war and famine. Over the past century, all Turkish governments have
    vehemently rejected the term genocide.

    The debate over the characterization of the 1915 events gained momentum
    after Pope Francis described them as genocide on Sunday in a Mass to
    commemorate the killings. The statement caused a diplomatic uproar
    from Turkey, which recalled its ambassador to the Vatican.

    The European Parliament's resolution on Wednesday calling on Turkey
    to normalize relations with Armenia and recognize the genocide further
    enraged the Turkish government.

    In a call with Martin Schulz, the president of the European Parliament,
    Mr. Davutoglu urged Europe to look in its own backyard by opening up
    its archives on events affecting native tribes.

    "If we open the books on European history, there will be questions
    about what was done in Asia and Africa," Mr. Davutoglu said. "What
    happened to the original tribes there? Where are the Aborigines? Where
    are the Native Americans?"

    He continued: "We never had ghettos. Ghettos are a European product.

    First there is ethnic discrimination, then there is genocide."

    After the European Parliament's vote, Mr. Davutoglu's chief adviser,
    Etyen Mahcupyan, an ethnic Armenian, caused a bit of an uproar by
    appearing to break with the government's opposition to use of the
    word genocide to describe what happened to the Armenian people.

    "If you accept the events in Bosnia and Africa as genocide, it is
    impossible to call what happened to the Armenians in 1915 something
    else," he said.

    A day after his statement, the prime minister's office announced that
    Mr. Mahcupyan would be stepping down because he had reached retirement
    age. But the timing led to speculation that he had been sidelined as
    a result of his remarks.

    "Mr. Mahcupyan's comments were disappointing, but his retirement is
    not related to them," said an official at the prime minister's office
    who spoke on the condition of anonymity to comply with government
    protocol. "At this stage, with the world siding against Turkey on
    this matter, it does not surprise me that people would try and link
    the two."

    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/18/world/europe/turkish-premier-says-european-stance-on-armenian-genocide-reflects-racism.html

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