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EU Conference Calls On Turkey To Recognize Its Christian Holocaust

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  • EU Conference Calls On Turkey To Recognize Its Christian Holocaust

    EU CONFERENCE CALLS ON TURKEY TO RECOGNIZE ITS CHRISTIAN HOLOCAUST

    http://www.hellenicnews.com/readnews.ht ml?newsid=6635&lang=US
    Thursday, 05 April 2007

    Brussels - A conference related to what has been often called as
    the Christian Holocaust, that is the destruction and genocide of
    Christian Assyrians, Greeks and Armenians, was held early last week
    in the European Parliament in Brussels.

    The event was hosted by the European parliamentary groups of the
    European United Left-Nordic Green Left, and the Seyfo Center, an
    Assyrian institution working on increasing wider public awareness of
    the genocide of the Assyrians, Armenians and Greeks by Turkey.

    The genocide took place in the years between the end of the Ottoman
    empire and the creation of the Turkish state by Mustafa Kemal Pasha
    (Ataturk). It has been estimated that at least 3.5 million Christians
    were slaughtered and another 2 million were forced to exile.

    The panel speakers included MEP Eva-Britt Svensson of the GUE/NGL,
    Sabri Atman, Director of the Seyfo Center, Prof. Dr. David Gaunt,
    Sodertorns University College, Sweden, MEP Markus Ferber of the EVP-ED,
    and Dr. Willy Fautre, Director Human Rights Without Frontiers, a
    major human rights NGO. The panel was chaired by Ms. Nicme Seven of
    the Assyrian Youth Federation.

    MEP Svensson called for Turkey's membership in the EU, but not without
    first complying with the Copenhagen criteria regarding the genocide as
    well as the "unrestricted opening of Ottoman archives for the world
    to see." Svensson further stated that "in a democratic environment,
    such issues should be discussed openly and not suppressed. Turkey
    should not be an exception."

    Sabri Atman agreed that the current Turkish position regarding
    the genocide and the silence by the EU countries is ethically
    unacceptable. "33% of the [Turkish] population was Christian. Today
    in Turkey, the total number of Christian people only amounts to 0.1%
    of the population. What happened to these people? What happened to
    the Assyrians, Armenians and Greeks? Where are they? Where did they
    disappear to?" he asked.

    Atman also addressed some of the counter arguments offered by some
    Turkish politicians that "Armenian organizations were fighting against
    the Turkish authority for independence and for that reason hundreds
    of thousands of Armenians lost their lives. This is just complete
    fabrication. How about the Assyrians, which Assyrian organization
    was fighting for independence? "

    Prof. Gaunt provided an answer to Mr. Atman's questions by stating
    that "evidence shows that Assyrians did not have any armed offensive
    measures". Gaunt also provided a historical overview of the genocide
    and how it expanded past the Ottoman areas and well into Persia. He
    also completed a book on the Assyrian genocide.

    Dr. Willy Fautre, focused on the specific Assyrian experience during
    the genocide and the current activities of Turkish groups in Brussels,
    the capital of Belgium and the European Union. On the Assyrian
    experience, Fautre stressed that "based on the formal definition of
    Genocide, the widespread persecution of the Assyrian civilians indeed
    constituted a form of Genocide. Up to now the international community
    has been hesitant in recognizing the Assyrian experience as a form
    of genocide. However, the Assyrian Genocide is indistinguishable,
    in form, from its Armenian counterpart."

    Fautre also provided numerous accounts of blatant interference and
    activities by Turkish groups in Belgium to suppress any talks and
    actions that shed light on the genocide perpetrated by Turkey. He
    called on the Belgian government to take action by recognizing the
    genocide unambiguously as well as have their government members do
    so and by screening their candidates regarding the genocide and to
    swear the allegiance to the Belgian state.

    MEP Markus Ferber stressed that the evidence, he has seen, shows that
    over 3 million people (Assyrians, Greeks and Armenians) were victims
    of genocide by Turkey and that his party will only support membership
    if Turkey faces its past and addresses it. Ferber went even further
    and opposed a full membership of Turkey, offering insted the status of
    "privileged partner."

    Finally, Ms. Nicme Seven explained that the conference was held at
    this specific week when Turkey's chief EU negotiator Ali Babacan is
    to travel to Brussels to attend the intergovernmental conference for
    the restart of membership talks with Turkey.

    EU accession negotiations with Turkey have been at a standstill for
    almost a year for reasons related to the Cyprus problem, Turkish
    obligations towards EU and Cyprus and the European public's profound
    opposition to the EU membership of Turkey, a Muslim country.

    The European Parliament conference hall was filled over capacity by
    mostly Assyrian family members of genocide victims and survivors who
    traveled from various European countries and even the USA.

    The conference was concluded by the signing of a joint press statement
    by the panel speakers, in which it was stressed among others that
    Turkey must come to terms with the genocide of its Christian minorities
    before obtaining EU membership.

    �he governments of various EU member-states, among which France and
    Greece, have also stressed the necessity for Turkey to acknowledge
    the genocides of Armenians, Greeks and Assyrians before eventually
    acceding to the European Union.

    >From AINA and other sources

    --Boundary_(ID_eslK0/o6FUGlUxIFq+Og5w)--
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