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Ankara Still Hopes to establish a joint Armenian-Turkish commish.

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  • Ankara Still Hopes to establish a joint Armenian-Turkish commish.

    Official Ankara still hopes for establishment of a joint Armenian-Turkish
    commission to investigate the Armenian Genocide of 1915

    Arminfo
    2007-04-14 16:25:00


    With the assistance of Britain, US and Russia, official Ankara is
    going to take concrete action to urge Armenia to accept the Turkish
    proposal to set up a joint commission of historians that will
    investigate the Armenian Genocide of 1915.

    The Turkish Zaman newspaper reports that Turkish diplomats did state
    that the adoption of the Armenian Genocide resolution by the US
    Congress has become less likely now as the Democrats have become more
    aware of the harm such a resolution could inflict on Turkish-US
    relations. The author of the article recalls that in 2005 Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Erdogan expressed willingness to open the Turkish
    archives for Armenian historians to find out whether "the World War I
    killing of Armenians could be described as genocide". "His offer to
    set up a joint commission of historians has not yet been answered
    positively by Armenia, allegedly under the strong influence of the
    hard-line Armenian diaspora". A Turkish government source speaking to
    Today's Zaman pointed out the reluctance of the influential states of
    the world to influence the Armenian Government's position in this
    matter. "Behind this indifference might lie the concern that real and
    serious evidence to support genocide allegations will not be found",
    the same source stressed.

    The article emphasizes that along with a possible opening of borders
    with Armenia and a possible appeal to to the International Court of
    Justice (ICJ), convening of the joint commission of historians is the
    priority task for Ankara. Government sources told Today's Zaman that
    Turkish legal experts have currently been studying the legal aspect of
    the issues as well as the February decision of the ICJ on Serbia. The
    court examining the case brought by Bosnia and Herzegovina against
    Serbia, in its controversial decision of Feb 26 this year, cleared
    Serbia of genocide in Bosnia while acknowledging the Serbian killing
    of Bosnians, at Srebrenica in particular in 1995 when over 7,000
    Bosnian Muslim men and boys were massacred. "Thus, Turkish legal
    experts have also been examining, among other things, whether the ICJ
    decision on Serbia could bring Turkey closer to clearing it of
    Armenian genocide allegations", the Zaman says.
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