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Couchepin Builds Bridges With Turkey

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  • Couchepin Builds Bridges With Turkey

    COUCHEPIN BUILDS BRIDGES WITH TURKEY

    Swissinfo, Switzerland
    Feb 5 2007

    Swiss Interior Minister Pascal Couchepin has begun his weeklong trip to
    Turkey by approving a cultural goods treaty between the two countries.

    But the visit looks set to be overshadowed by the "Armenian question"
    - whether Armenians suffered genocide at the hands of Turks almost
    100 years ago. Couchepin said he would raise the issue.

    Couchepin, who holds the culture portfolio, met Atilla Koc, the
    Turkish minister for culture and tourism, in Ankara on Monday and
    the pair agreed to pursue an accord aimed at returning cultural goods.

    Turkey has many significant classical antiques, from the Byzantine era
    as well as modern times. Switzerland is the world's fourth-largest
    art trade hub - behind the United States, Britain and France - with
    a market worth SFr1.5 billion ($1.2 billion).

    Couchepin is also set to meet the Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdoðan and other ministers on Tuesday.

    He will then spend two days in the southeastern part of the country,
    populated mostly by Kurds, where he will meet local dignitaries and
    visit projects supported by Switzerland. On Friday, he will attend
    a meeting with Turkish intellectuals.

    Genocide?

    Couchepin is visiting Turkey at a tense time. On January 19 Hrant Dink,
    a Turkish-Armenian editor who wrote articles referring to a "genocide"
    of Armenians, was murdered in Istanbul by an ultra-nationalist Turk.

    Armenians say Ottoman Turks slaughtered up to 1.8 million Armenians in
    a planned genocide between 1915 and 1919. Turkey vehemently denies that
    the mass killings were genocide, saying the death toll is inflated and
    Armenians were killed in civil unrest as the Ottoman Empire collapsed.

    In an interview on Swiss radio on Sunday, Couchepin said the topic
    would be brought up in the course of his visit, adding that the
    Swiss government's position was clear: "History should be left to
    the historians".

    He said an important step would be the creation of an international
    commission that would "examine the issues and look for the causes of
    the events of that time - including the massacre".

    The Swiss government does not officially speak of genocide.

    Rocky

    Previous visits by Swiss politicians to Turkey have hardly gone
    smoothly - if at all.

    On an official visit in October to commemorate the 80th anniversary
    of Turkey's adoption of the Swiss civil code, Swiss Justice Minister
    Christoph Blocher attacked Swiss anti-racism laws that have led to
    investigations against two Turks for denying the 1915 massacre.

    Blocher's comments raised a storm of protest in Switzerland and
    Couchepin described them as "unacceptable".

    In August 2005 the Turkish authorities postponed a visit by the then
    economics minister, Joseph Deiss, citing "agenda problems" of his
    Turkish counterpart.

    Cultural goods

    A cultural goods treaty with Turkey is the latest in a series of
    measures by Switzerland to combat trafficking in stolen antiquities.

    In December Couchepin signed an accord with Peru aimed at returning
    stolen goods, particularly archaeological artefacts, and in October
    Switzerland and neighbouring Italy agreed a similar deal against the
    traffic of illicit goods.

    The authorities say the measures have already boosted Switzerland's
    standing as a place for dealing in art and antiquities.

    Previously the country had gained an unwelcome reputation as a transit
    point for stolen artefacts because of its previous reluctance to
    tighten its laws on the transfer of cultural goods.

    --Boundary_(ID_Nud6rzb4R50/K2QtTcX6zw)--
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