Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey Denies Report on Cancellation of Gallipoli Commemoration Even

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkey Denies Report on Cancellation of Gallipoli Commemoration Even

    Turkey Denies Report on Cancellation of Gallipoli Commemoration Events

    By Weekly Staff on February 22, 2015


    Sources close to the Turkish government have denied Sunday's Zaman's
    report claiming the Gallipoli commemoration events have been canceled,
    according to Daily Sabah. "Sources from both the Presidency and Prime
    Ministry have refuted the claims that the commemorations have been
    canceled, refraining from offering further details over how many and
    which countries will participate in the Gallipoli centennial
    commemoration," reported Sabah, which highlighted Zaman's link to the
    Gulen Movement.

    On Feb. 21, Sunday's Zaman reported that the commemoration ceremonies
    marking the centennial of the Gallipoli Campaign of World War I were
    canceled. The paper said the reason for cancellation was the low
    number of heads of states who agreed to attend Ankara for the
    ceremonies that were scheduled to take place on April 24--Armenian
    Genocide commemoration day.

    The paper quoted a government official, who wished to remain
    anonymous, as saying, "The Gallipoli celebrations have been canceled.
    All preparations have been suspended as the number of RSVPs to the
    invitation is not positive. Only five countries have accepted the
    invitation and they will not be represented by high-level officials."

    Leading up to the Gallipoli commemorations, Turkish President Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan had sent official invitations to more than 100 world
    leaders, including Armenian President Serge Sarkisian, to partake in
    the ceremonies. The date designated for these commemoration
    events--April 24--created uproar among Armenians worldwide, while
    Turkish human rights groups urged world leaders to boycott the
    Gallipoli events.

    On Jan. 16, Sarkisian responded to Erdogan's invitation to Turkey on
    April 24, in a strongly worded letter. "Turkey continues its
    conventional denial policy and is perfecting its instrumentation for
    distorting history. This time, Turkey is marking the 100th anniversary
    of the Battle of Gallipoli on April 24, even though the battle began
    on March 18, 1915 and lasted until late January 1916, while the
    Allies' operation started on April 25," he wrote, adding, "What is the
    purpose [of this] if not to distract the world's attention from the
    100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide?"


    http://armenianweekly.com/2015/02/22/turkey-denies-cancellation/

Working...
X