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UN Stops Rwandan Genocide Exhibition

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  • UN Stops Rwandan Genocide Exhibition

    UN STOPS RWANDAN GENOCIDE EXHIBITION

    AngolaPress, Angola
    April 11 2007

    New York, UN 04/11 - The UN has postponed an exhibition on the Rwandan
    genocide after Turkish diplomats objected to references to the Armenian
    genocide in Turkey during World War I.

    The exhibition was earlier scheduled for opening by the UN Secretary-
    General Ban Ki-moon on Monday at the organisation`s headquarters in
    New York.

    However, a UN spokesman Farhan Haq told reporters Tuesday the
    exhibition was delayed because the normal process was not followed.

    "The exhibition has been postponed until the regular review process
    is completed. Normally the United Nations has to review exhibitions,
    in order to take into account all positions, as it does in any
    exhibition," Haq said.

    Asked whether a dispute over Armenians in Turkey was responsible for
    the stoppage, he said that "it was not the sole issue".

    "As for Turkey, the United Nations has not expressed a position
    on incidents that took place long before the United Nations was
    established," he noted.

    Panels of graphics, photos and statements, which were installed at the
    weekend in the visitors` lobby for the exhibition by the organisers,
    British-based Aegis Trust, were later dismantled.

    The trust campaigns for the prevention of genocide and runs a center
    in Kigali, the Rwandan capital, and its exhibition was organised in
    memory of about 800,000 Rwandans killed 13 years ago.

    PANA gathered that hours after the show was assembled, some Turkish
    diplomats at the UN were said to have spotted "offending wordings"
    in a section of a passage entitled: "What is genocide?" and raised
    objections.

    The passage said: "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 recognise crimes of barbarity as international crimes."
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