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ANKARA: Erdogan: ADL Corrects Genocide Mistake

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  • ANKARA: Erdogan: ADL Corrects Genocide Mistake

    http://www.turkishweekly.net/news.php?id=47787#

    J ournal of Turkish Weekly
    08/25/07

    ADL corrects 'genocide' mistake in letter, ErdoÄ?an say

    The US-based Anti-Defamation League (ADL) expressed regret over
    debates centered on its recent decision to recognize Armenian claims
    of genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Empire in a letter addressing
    PM Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an.

    Foxman said in his letter that the ADL had huge respect for the
    Turkish people and has never desired to put the Turkish people and
    their leaders into a difficult situation, expressing deep regret over
    what the Turkish people had to go through in the past few days since
    it agreed to recognize the alleged genocide, reversing a long-held
    policy, the Anatolia news agency said.Foxman also said the ADL would
    continue to look for ways to improve relations with Turkey, lamenting
    the fact that the latest debates strained ties between Turkey and the
    ADL.

    "The wrong step that has been taken is corrected," said ErdoÄ?an in
    subsequent comments to reporters. "They said they shared our
    sensitivity and expressed the mistake they made. ¦ They said they will
    continue to give us all the support they have given so far," he added.

    In a statement published on its Internet site on Thursday, the ADL
    said it was ready to support reconciliation efforts between Turks and
    Armenians after it sent shockwaves through Ankara by recognizing
    Armenian allegations of genocide earlier this week.

    Reports in the Turkish media said the move followed a telephone
    conversation between ErdoÄ?an and Israeli President Shimon Peres on
    Thursday. ErdoÄ?an stressed the "futility" of the ADL decision to call
    the events genocide in the conversation and Peres responded by saying
    that Israel's well-known position on the issue of genocide claims has
    not changed. The Israeli prime minister also said Israel attached
    great importance to relations with Turkey and promised to "advocate
    Turkey's position on the issue in the US."

    Reports said Peres then called ADL National Director Foxman.

    "We must encourage steps to create an atmosphere in which Armenia will
    respond favorably to the several recent overtures of Turkey to convene
    a joint commission to assist the parties in achieving a resolution of
    their profound differences. We believe there are many renowned
    historians, human rights activists and distinguished world leaders who
    are willing to lend their knowledge, experience and judgment to this
    cause. We know that earlier this year, Professor Elie Wiesel and more
    than 50 of his fellow Nobel Laureates called for concrete steps to be
    taken by Turkey and Armenia to find a way forward to reach the goal of
    reconciliation, and that, last week, Professor Wiesel reaffirmed his
    support for efforts to create a body in which both Turkish and
    Armenian experts can come together to work cooperatively in
    re-examining the shared past of both peoples. The force and passion of
    the debate today leaves us more convinced than ever that this issue
    does not belong in a forum such as the United States Congress," the
    ADL's Thursday statement said, going on to say: "Although independent
    scholars may have reached a consensus about the genocide, in an effort
    to help accomplish the reconciliation there is room for further
    dispassionate scholarly examination of the details of those dark and
    terrible days."

    "ADL and the American Jewish community should focus their attention on
    supporting efforts to urge Turkey and Armenia to make this happen,"
    the statement added, though it used the g-word, "genocide."

    Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died in a
    systematic campaign by the Ottoman Turks around the time of World War
    I, but Ankara categorically rejects the label, saying that both
    Armenians and Turks died in civil strife during World War I when the
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
    with Russian troops invading the crumbling Ottoman Empire. According
    to the Turkish archive documents more than 520.000 civilian Turkish
    and Kurdish people were massacred by the armed Armenian groups between
    1915-1918.

    Ahead of ErdoÄ?an's conversation with Peres, the Turkish Foreign
    Ministry spokesperson Levent Bilman said there was no "consensus"
    among scientists and historians that the World War I events
    constituted genocide, contrary to the ADL's conviction that there is.
    "Moreover, it is Turkey who has asked Armenia to establish a joint
    commission and reveal the historical realities. No positive response
    has yet been made to this offer," he added. It sparked attention that
    the ADL referred to the same proposal in its Thursday statement.

    * Envoy to hold more talks in Israel

    Meanwhile, Turkey's Ambassador to Israel Namık Tan, who this week cut
    short his holiday in Turkey to return to Israel, told the Anatolia
    news agency yesterday that he would once more voice Turkey's stance on
    the ADL statement during talks with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
    as well as with Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, both currently on
    vacation.

    Ankara believes that as much as Turkey attributes high importance to
    its relations with Israel, Israel attributes the same level of
    importance to its relations with Turkey, Tan said. "These statements
    do not have any legal and historical grounds. They should be corrected
    without fail," he added, noting that the statements have not been
    compatible with Turkey's existing strategic relations with either
    Israel or the US.

    25 August 2007


    Copyright (c) 2005 Journal of Turkish Weekly
    http://www.turkishweekly.net/news.php?id=47 787
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