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  • Australian FM Bishop soothes Turkish concerns

    Neos Kosmos - Hellenic Perspective, Australia
    Jan 28 2015


    Bishop soothes Turkish concerns

    Armenian Genocide recognition: FOI request reveals Government's worry
    over Ankara backlash

    Michael Sweet

    A letter sent by Foreign Minister Julie Bishop obtained last month
    under a Freedom of Information request - along with a file of heavily
    redacted documents - is proof that the Australian government
    "continues to be gagged" by Turkey on the issue of the Armenian
    Genocide, according to the Armenian National Committee of Australia
    (ANCA).

    In the letter in question, written on May 15 last year, Julie Bishop
    wrote to her Turkish counterpart, Ahmet Davutoglu, to soothe Ankara's
    unease over statements made just days earlier by Treasurer Joe Hockey.

    Mr Hockey (who is of Armenian heritage) was unable to attend the
    annual Armenian Genocide commemoration in Sydney on April 24, but made
    his position clear in a message to the event's organisers, saying the
    word 'genocide' was the only possible way to define the actions of
    Turkey 100 years ago.
    "Back in 1915, the word genocide did not exist, as the UN Convention
    on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide was only
    adopted in 1948 in the aftermath of the Holocaust," wrote Mr Hockey,
    before adding, "...there is simply no other word for what happened to
    the Armenian people of Ottoman Turkey."

    The statement - distributed to the world's media - caused
    consternation in Ankara, and motivated the then Turkish Foreign
    Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to seek assurances from his Australian
    counterpart that Mr Hockey's views were his own, rather than a new
    position adopted by the Australian government.

    Ankara has previously condemned parliamentary motions passed by South
    Australia and New South Wales recognising the genocides carried out
    between 1915 and 1922, which included the decimation of Pontian Greek
    and Assyrian communities.

    In August 2013 Turkey threatened to ban NSW MPs from attending this
    year's Anzac centenary commemorations at Gallipoli, after the state
    parliament passed a motion recognising the genocide.

    Forced to qualify her cabinet colleague's statement, Julie Bishop's
    May 15 response sought to calm Turkish concerns, saying:
    "Recognising the important interests at stake for both countries, I
    assure you that there has been no decision to change the long-standing
    position of successive Australian governments on this issue."

    Ms Bishop said that while the government was "sympathetic to the
    Armenian people and other communities that suffered such terrible
    losses during the tragic events at the end of the Ottoman Empire, the
    Australian government does not, however, recognise these events as
    'genocide'."

    The minister added: "We do not seek to intervene in this sensitive
    historical debate. We believe the issue is best resolved through
    dialogue between the communities and governments concerned."

    While the FOI request asked for background documents to the letter,
    large sections of the files released by DFAT - containing briefings
    and other correspondence - were redacted, citing disclosure of
    information would cause damage to "the international relations of the
    Commonwealth".

    Meanwhile the ANCA has suggested that Minister Bishop's phrase
    "recognising the important interests at stake for both countries" is
    shorthand; an implicit agreement by the government not to 'rock the
    boat' with Turkey in Anzac centenary year.

    "It is obvious that Australia has succumbed to Turkey's ongoing
    threats to ban MPs from attending the Centenary commemorations at
    Anzac Cove, and even close Anzac Cove in its entirety in the lead up
    to the centenary, should Australia recognise the events of 1915 as
    genocide," ANCA executive director Vache Kahramanian told Neos Kosmos.

    "Sadly, the Australian government continues to be gagged by a
    so-called 'ally' when it comes to discussing the Armenian Genocide."

    Mr Kahramanian said he was bewildered by the redactions in the
    documentation which outlined the government's consideration of the
    matter.

    "It's clear that Australian government officials continue to succumb
    to ongoing threats by Turkey and as a result, allow a foreign
    government to dictate Australia's position on this issue," said the
    ANC director.

    "In this centenary year, where Australia will commemorate the horrors
    of WWI, it should also have the moral courage to unequivocally
    recognise and condemn the Armenian Genocide and pay homage to the
    thousands of Australians - who were at the forefront of providing
    international aid during and after the genocides of 1915-1923."

    Panayiotis Diamadis, director of the Australian Institute for
    Holocaust and Genocide Studies, told Neos Kosmos that the letter from
    Julie Bishop confirmed an "obsequious approach" by DFAT to the issue
    of Armenian Genocide official recognition.

    "The third-ranking member of the federal government calling for
    recognition of the genocides thoroughly shook Ankara. They were, and
    remain, terrified of further recognitions by parliaments in Australia.

    "Australian parliamentary recognition of the genocides of the
    indigenous peoples of Anatolia and eastern Thrace is inevitable,
    because it constitutes recognition of the genocides in Australian
    history."


    http://neoskosmos.com/news/en/Bishop-soothes-Turkish-concerns

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