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UN genocide exhibit dismantled after Turkey complains

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  • UN genocide exhibit dismantled after Turkey complains

    UN genocide exhibit dismantled after Turkey complains - International Herald

    The International Herald Tribune
    April 10, 2007
    By Warren Hoge

    UNITED NATIONS, New York: The United Nations dismantled an exhibit on the
    Rwandan genocide and postponed its scheduled opening by the UN secretary
    general, Ban Ki Moon, after the Turkish mission objected to references to
    the Armenian genocide in Turkey at the time of World War I.
    The panels of graphics, photos and statements had been installed in the
    visitors lobby Thursday by the Aegis Trust, of Britain.
    The trust campaigns for the prevention of genocide and runs a center in
    Kigali, the Rwandan capital, memorializing the 500,000 victims of the
    massacres there 13 years ago.
    Hours after the show was assembled, however, a Turkish diplomat spotted
    offending words in a section entitled "What is genocide?" and raised
    objections.
    The passage said that "following World War I, during which one million
    Armenians were murdered in Turkey," Raphael Lemkin, a Polish lawyer credited
    with coining the word genocide, "urged the League of Nations to recognize
    crimes of barbarity as international crimes."

    James Smith, the chief executive of Aegis, said he was told by the UN on
    Saturday that the sentence would have to be eliminated or the exhibition
    would be struck.
    Armen Martirosyan, the Armenian ambassador to the UN, said he sought out
    Kiyotaka Akasaka, the UN under secretary general for public information, and
    thought he had reached an agreement to let the show go forward by omitting
    the words "in Turkey."
    But Akasaka said, "That was his suggestion, and I agreed only to take it
    into account in finding the final wording."
    Baki Ilkin, the Turkish ambassador to the UN, said, "We just expressed our
    discomfort over the text's making references to the Armenian issue and
    drawing parallels with the genocide in Rwanda."
    There were widespread killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during several
    years beginning in 1915 in which an estimated 1.5 million died, but Turkey
    has always vehemently rejected claims of genocide.
    Smith said he was "very disappointed because this was supposed to talk about
    the lessons drawn from Rwanda and point up that what is happening in Darfur
    is the cost of inaction."
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