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  • BAKU: MEPs call resolution on 1915 events 'unbalanced'

    Trend, Azerbaijan
    April 18 2015

    MEPs call resolution on 1915 events 'unbalanced'

    18 April 2015, 10:19 (GMT+05:00)


    As the European Parliament adopted a resolution Wednesday to recognize
    the 1915 events as "genocide," some MEPs have called the act
    "unbalanced." Anadolu Agency reported

    "I cannot say it (the resolution) was balanced," Greens lawmaker
    Ernest Maragall told The Anadolu Agency on Thursday. "Europe has to
    help to create the common table (and) the common scenarios where the
    Turkish people (and) the Armenian people could frankly explain
    themselves to each other and look for and understand reconciliation."

    Maragall added that one must distinguish between the Ottoman Empire
    and the current Turkish state, which has accepted more than 1.7
    million Syrian refugees since the Syrian civil war began in 2011.

    "We should take into account that Turkey deserves respect and deserves
    recognition from European countries," Maragall said regarding the
    Syrian refugees in Turkey.

    The European Parliament first recognized the 1915 events as "genocide"
    in a 1987 resolution, which the parliament reiterated in a vote
    Wednesday -- the centenary of the 1915 events.

    Ismail Ertug, a member of the European Parliament for the Socialists
    and Democrats, told AA on Thursday that pressure for the "recognition
    of the Armenian genocide" in Turkey has not helped so far in bringing
    reconciliation between Turks and Armenians.

    "There needs to be a common agreement in order for Turkey and Armenia
    to normalize relations," Ertug said. "Negotiations will not start and
    problems will not be solved unless there is confidence."

    Turkey has repeatedly rejected the EU's definition of the events and
    has said that Armenians died during a relocation process in 1915
    during World War I, when a portion of the Armenian population, living
    in the Ottoman Empire, sided with the invading Russians and revolted
    against the empire.

    Armenia has demanded an apology and compensation, while Turkey has
    officially refuted Armenian allegations over the incidents saying
    that, although Armenians died during the relocations, many Turks also
    lost their lives in attacks carried out by Armenian gangs in Anatolia.



    Opening archives

    Turkey has called for the establishment of a joint commission of
    historians and the opening of archives to study and uncover what
    actually happened between the Ottoman government and its Armenian
    citizens.

    Ertug said calls for establishing a joint historians' commission is a
    good idea, but that it is frozen if the calls are unanswered.

    "I think Turkey should not stop there," he said. "Turkey should go on
    with this process in a fair and impartial manner."



    'A tragedy'

    The European Commission has refused to call the 1915 events a
    "genocide" following the European Parliament's resolution.

    The European Commission, the 28-nation-bloc's executive body, referred
    to the 1915 events as a "tragedy."

    European Commission Vice President Kristalina Georgieva told the
    European Parliament on Wednesday that the EU "fully acknowledges the
    significance of the upcoming commemoration as well as the divergence
    of views over this tragedy."


    http://en.trend.az/world/turkey/2385337.html

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