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ANKARA: UN Exhibit Delayed Upon Objection From Turkey

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  • ANKARA: UN Exhibit Delayed Upon Objection From Turkey

    UN EXHIBIT DELAYED UPON OBJECTION FROM TURKEY

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    April 11 2007

    A UN exhibit on the 13th anniversary of the Rwanda genocide has been
    delayed after Turkey's objections to a reference to the killings of
    Anatolian Armenians during World War I as genocide.

    A UN exhibit on the 13th anniversary of the Rwanda genocide has been
    delayed after Turkey's objections to a reference to the killings of
    Anatolian Armenians during World War I as genocide, organizers said on
    Monday, while Ambassador Baki Ýlkin, Turkey's permanent representative
    to the UN, made it clear that Turkey's objection was also supported
    by other UN countries, thus delaying the opening of the exhibit.

    The exhibit, organized in part by the British-based Aegis Trust, was
    scheduled to be opened on Monday by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

    But Turkey objected to a sentence in the text that said, "How the
    Armenian killings contributed to the creation of the term 'genocide',"
    according to James Smith, chief executive of Aegis, whose mission is
    to prevent genocide.

    It said: "Following World War I, during which 1 million Armenians were
    murdered in Turkey, Polish lawyer Raphael Lemkin urged the League of
    Nations to recognize crimes of barbarity as international crimes,"
    Smith said.

    "It is wrong to draw a parallel between the genocide in Rwanda and
    the Armenian allegations," Ambassador Ýlkin said, as he emphasized
    that other countries had also objected to the exhibit, not only
    Turkey. Organizers said they were informed of the delay by the UN
    Department of Public Information, which had initially approved the
    exhibit in the visitors' lobby. The secretary-general's office
    then consented to the postponement. UN officials confirmed that
    objections by Turkey and other countries, which they did not name,
    were responsible for the delay. One staff member said an official in
    the Department of Public Information had not sent the text to other
    divisions for fact-checking.

    Turkey notified the UN secretariat of its objection last week, Ýlkin
    explained. The ambassador stressed that there has been no hesitation
    in describing what happened in Rwanda as genocide: "The UN secretariat
    called us [on Monday] and said they have come to the conclusion that
    the exhibition should be reviewed not only due to Turkey's concerns,
    but also in general terms and that the exhibition has been delayed
    until this review is finished."

    UN Associate Spokesman Farhan Haq also said that the exhibit has been
    postponed until the regular review process is completed.

    Turkey strongly denies claims by Armenia and its supporters that the
    Ottoman Empire committed a systematic genocide against Armenians during
    World War I. Ankara claims figures of deaths in the low millions are
    greatly exaggerated.

    --Boundary_(ID_Zstbmy+Oj5MRqn/zeEzGL A)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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