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Nationalist Turks Protest Armenia Move

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  • Nationalist Turks Protest Armenia Move

    NATIONALIST TURKS PROTEST ARMENIA MOVE

    Irish Examiner, Ireland
    Sept 26 2005

    HUNDREDS of Turkish nationalists chanting slogans and waving flags
    protested over the weekend against a controversial academic conference
    devoted to the WWI massacre of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey.

    The conference had been due to open on Friday at two universities
    in Istanbul but a last-minute court order blocked it, causing acute
    embarrassment to the Turkish government just days before the start
    of its EU membership talks.

    Organisers then circumvented the court ban by moving the conference
    to a third university in the city.

    "This conference is an insult to our republic and to the memory of
    Mustafa Kemal Ataturk," Erkal Onsel, head of the Istanbul branch of
    the left wing but nationalist Workers' Party, told protesters gathered
    outside the private Bilgi University.

    Ataturk is the revered founder of the modern Turkish Republic on the
    ashes of the Ottoman Empire in 1923. Armenia and its supporters around
    the world say 1.5 million Armenians died in a systematic genocide
    committed by Ottoman Turkish forces between 1915 and 1923.

    Ankara accepts many Armenians died on Turkish soil during and after
    WWI, but says they were victims of a partisan conflict which claimed
    even more Turkish Muslim lives as the Ottoman Empire was collapsing.

    It denies any genocide.

    Turkey is under pressure to change its stance if it is to become the
    first Muslim country to join the EU.

    The conference had originally been due to take place at Istanbul's
    Bosphorus University in May but was cancelled after Justice Minister
    Cemil Cicek accused those backing the genocide claims of "stabbing
    Turkey in the back".

    This time, with a nervous eye on Brussels as the clock ticks
    towards the start of its long-delayed EU entry talks on October 3,
    the government has strongly backed the conference. Despite a flurry
    of EU-inspired reforms recently, promoting certain interpretations
    of Turkish history can still be deemed a criminal offence under a
    revised penal code.

    The protesters said the organisers of the conference were not really
    upholding freedom of speech.

    "They don't let us inside... they don't give us a chance to put our
    case. They forget those of the Turkish nation killed by Armenians,"
    said Kemal Ermetin, who runs a nationalist magazine.

    The protesters displayed photographs of what they said were Azeris
    killed by Armenians in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh
    during fighting in the early 1990s.

    Turkey closed its border and cut diplomatic ties with tiny
    ex-Soviet Armenia in 1993 to protest against Armenian occupation of
    Nagorno-Karabakh, part of the territory of Azerbaijan, a regional
    Turkic-speaking ally of Ankara.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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