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Turkey Criticizes Canada's PM Harper

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  • Turkey Criticizes Canada's PM Harper

    TURKEY CRITICIZES CANADA'S PM HARPER

    Edmonton Sun, Canada
    April 25 2006

    PM backs recognition of Armenian genocide

    ANKARA, Turkey - Turkey on Tuesday criticized Canadian Prime Minister
    Stephen Harper for remarks he made in support of recognizing the
    mass killings of Armenians during the First World War as genocide,
    and warned that such statements threatened to harm Turkish-Canadian
    relations.

    In a statement on April 21, Harper recalled that Canada's Senate and
    House of Commons had adopted resolutions recognizing the killings as
    genocide and said, "I and my party supported those resolutions and
    continue to recognize them today."

    Turkey's Foreign Ministry issued a stern statement saying it
    "regretted" Harper's remarks over the killings that occurred more
    than eight decades ago.

    "Statements concerning disputed historic events by foreign parliaments
    or governments nearly a century later will not change the nature of
    what happened in reality," the statement said.

    "Such statements do not contribute to the environment of
    dialogue between Turkey and Armenia, and have a negative effect on
    Turkish-Canadian relations," it added. "The stagnation of relations
    between the two countries after the Canadian Parliament's decision
    is the clearest example of this."

    Turkey's Hurriyet newspaper reported Tuesday that Turkey would bar
    Canadian companies from bidding for the construction of a nuclear
    power plant that Turkey hopes to build in the Black Sea coastal town
    of Sinop.

    In 2001, Turkey cancelled millions of dollars' worth of defence
    deals with French companies after legislators in France recognized
    the genocide.

    Armenians say some 1.5 million of their people were killed as the
    Ottoman Empire forced them from eastern Turkey between 1915 and 1923
    in a deliberate campaign of genocide.

    Turkey denies it was genocide, saying the death count is inflated
    and insisting that Armenians were killed or displaced as the Ottoman
    Empire tried to secure its border with Russia and stop attacks by
    Armenian militants.

    Several other countries, including Argentina, Poland, France and
    Russia, have declared the killings a genocide, and there is strong
    pressure from Armenians worldwide for the U.S. Congress to recognize
    the killings as genocide as well.
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