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ANKARA: Erdošan: Politicizing 1915 incidents will hurt Armenian Dias

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  • ANKARA: Erdošan: Politicizing 1915 incidents will hurt Armenian Dias

    Daily Sabah, Turkey
    April 19 2015

    ErdoĆ°an: Politicizing 1915 incidents will hurt Armenian Diaspora the most

    MEHMET ƇELIK@celikmehmet0
    ISTANBUL


    President ErdoĆ°an lambasted the EP for 'politicizing' the 1915
    incidents by labeling the loss of Armenian lives as 'genocide.' He
    added that the Armenians will suffer most from the move and that
    Turkey is ready to reconcile with Armenia

    Turkey's President Recep Tayyip ErdoĆ°an attended an inauguration
    ceremony for various educational, medical, and sports facilities in
    Turkey's western province of Kocaeli, where he harshly criticized the
    European Parliament's (EP) adoption of a resolution urging all member
    states to recognize the 1915 incidents as "genocide."

    The president refuted the EP's decision, accusing them of using
    Armenia against Turkey, saying "We know that their intention is not to
    protect the rights of Armenians."

    ErdoĆ°an said that Turkey is ready to open its archives to investigate
    the matter and that the incidents should be investigated by
    historians, not politicians. He also called on Armenia and other
    countries to open their archives, if they had any. ErdoĆ°an further
    added that Turkey has no problems with Armenians, and the fact that
    80,000 Armenians live in Turkey is a proof of that.

    "I call on the world, especially Armenians, politicizing the matter
    will harm Armenians the most," ErdoĆ°an said.

    President ErdoĆ°an also spoke on the issue of Nagorny Karabakh between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan saying, "Our doors are still open to Armenia.
    We are ready to establish all kinds of co-operation with them, as long
    as they take positive steps towards the claims of so-called 'genocide'
    and the issue of Karabakh."

    The dispute over Nagorny Karabakh is rooted in the 1990s war, which
    left at least 30,000 people dead as a result of attacks by Armenian
    separatists, who seized the territory from Azerbaijan and drove out
    the Azeri population.

    The dispute between the two countries has not yet been resolved,
    although a cease-fire has been established since 1994. The Karabakh
    regions have been internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan.

    The 1915 incidents have been a source of dispute, disagreement and the
    reason for decades of strained relations between Turkey and Armenia.
    Armenia claims that 1.5 million people were deliberately killed.
    However, Turkey denies these claims, saying that the historical facts
    do not reflect such an intention and that the deaths were a result of
    deportations and civil strife.

    The 1915 events took place 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.

    The Ottoman Empire relocated Armenians in eastern Anatolia following
    the revolts, and there were Armenian casualties during the relocation
    process.

    Armenia demands a formal 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.
    Furthermore, the Turkish General Directorate of State Archives last
    week began to open the state archives over the 1915 incidents between
    Turkey and Armenia to the public via Twitter, following scores of
    unanswered calls by the Turkish side to open the archives.

    Posted by the @devletarsiv Twitter account with the #Ermenimeselesi
    (Armenian issue) hashtag, the documents aim to reveal the facts over
    the decades-long dispute on the 100th anniversary of the incidents.

    In a telegram sent by the governor of the eastern province of Bitlis
    to the interior ministry dated Sept. 18, 1914 regarding the stance to
    be taken by Ottoman Armenian citizens during the war, it reads: "The
    recent decision and suggestion by Armenian thinkers is to stay calm
    and bow to the state [Ottoman Empire] until the declaration of war, to
    change the enemy party if war is declared, to stay calm and bow to the
    state if our army gains ground and to arm themselves and hamper the
    army's route if it withdraws. This information is declared by the MuĆ¾
    Governorate to be from trustworthy intelligence. The Third Army
    Command is [also] informed."

    Another published document also revealed that attacks by Armenian
    rebels increased in February, 1920 and 28 Islamic villages were
    destroyed with more than 2,000 Muslim villagers killed by Armenian
    rebels. A subsequent letter to the Interior Ministry on March 7, 1915
    stated that 30,000 Muslim men in the eastern provinces of Kars and
    Ardahan were killed by Armenian rebels, and the letter also warned
    against some Armenian soldiers in the Ottoman army refusing to fight
    against the enemy, making themselves captives to the enemy side
    deliberately in order to leak information.

    SavaĆ¾ EĆ°ilmez, who is the head of ASIMED, a Turkish foundation aimed
    at fighting the "genocide" allegations, said yesterday that they are
    going to organize conferences in some countries with photos and
    documents.

    "Our actions are aimed at telling the truth, not designed to defend
    ourselves [i.e. Turkey]. We will attend a conference in the U.S. and
    inform NGOs about the Armenian issue [the 1915 incidents]. We will
    defend no one, including the Turkish side. We only aim to tell the
    truth based on the sources," said EĆ°ilmez.

    http://www.dailysabah.com/diplomacy/2015/04/19/erdogan-politicizing-1915-incidents-will-hurt-armenian-diaspora-the-most

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