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UN Apologizes To Rwanda Over Postponed Genocide Exhibit: Envoy

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  • UN Apologizes To Rwanda Over Postponed Genocide Exhibit: Envoy

    UN APOLOGIZES TO RWANDA OVER POSTPONED GENOCIDE EXHIBIT: ENVOY

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 11, 2007 Wednesday 9:19 PM GMT

    The UN has apologized for postponing the opening of an exhibit marking
    the anniversary of the 1994 Rwanda genocide over Turkish objections to
    a reference to the killing of Armenians in Turkey during World War I,
    the Rwandan ambassador said Wednesday.

    "We were contacted by UN Under Secretary General (for public
    information Kiyotaka Akasaka) who told me they are reviewing the
    text (of the exhibit)," Rwanda's permanent UN representative Joseph
    Nsengimana told AFP. "He apologizes. The exhibit will (officially)
    open very soon."

    The exhibit, which was to have been inaugurated by UN chief Ban Ki-moon
    Monday, is meant to commemorate the 13th anniversary of the Rwandan
    genocide during which Hutu extremists killed some 800,000 people,
    most of them ethnic minority Tutsis.

    Farhan Haq, a UN spokesman, said the controversy arose when a Turkish
    diplomat walked by the exhibit as it was being put up last week
    and complained about a reference to the killing of several hundred
    thousand Armenians in Turkey during World War I.

    He said the reference was on a small panel with a quotation from
    Raphael Lemkin, the Polish-born Jewish lawyer who coined the
    word genocide in 1943, had earlier shown interest in the Armenian
    "genocide" and campaigned in the League of Nations to ban what he
    called "barbarity" and "vandalism."

    Turkey, the successor of the Ottoman Empire, categorically denies
    claims of genocide and says thousands of Turks and Armenians were
    killed in civil strife during 1915-1917 when Armenians took up arms
    for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian troops
    invading the crumbling empire.

    Much to Turkey's ire, many countries have recognized the killings
    as genocide.

    Haq said a review panel made up of officials of the UN departments
    of public information and political affairs as well as those with
    expertise in genocide affairs would now look over the photographs
    and the text of the exhibit ahead of the inauguration.

    "This is what they were supposed to have done," he said. "I am hoping
    it will be very quick."

    The exhibit is partly organized by Aegis Trust, a British-based
    international organization lobbying to prevent genocide worldwide.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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