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ANKARA: Oktay Eksi: Closing the barn door after the horses are out

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  • ANKARA: Oktay Eksi: Closing the barn door after the horses are out

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    Feb 9 2007


    Oktay Eksi: Closing the barn door after the horses are out: Gul and
    the Armenian claims



    If only we could have asked Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, who said
    yesterday in Washington, DC "Preventing the passage of the Armenian
    genocide bill is the duty of the Turkish people, the government,
    civil society organizations, and intellectuals," where he had been up
    until now.


    For years now we have been saying, in this column, that books should
    be printed, international conferences should be held, films should be
    made, foreign student groups should be formed, and that we should
    abandon our defense strategy and move to full war mentality on this
    matter.

    Is there even one example which shows that Abdullah Gul, who has
    headed up our foreign policy now for four years, has listened to any
    of this?


    It is only now that it has become clear that the US Congress will
    pass a bill recognizing that "The Turks did commit genocide" that Gul
    decides to visit Washington and fire some salvos into the Congress.

    Pushing aside anything which has been written in this column or
    others on the matter, what about examples such as when Professor
    Justin McCarthy spoke before the Turkish Parliament, urging "Why
    don't you pass out the books that have been published on this
    question, the ones which are sitting in the depos of the ministries,
    so at least people can learn the basic theses of this matter." That
    too never happened.

    Maybe you have read about this in the newspapers. Recently, TIME
    magazine's European edition announced a decision not to amend the
    phrase "Turkish genocide" with any cautioning words. In fact, it even
    offered a free 52 minute DVD along with the up to 550 thousand
    magazines it sold across Europe, the DVD being a focus on the
    "genocide carried out by the Turks." In addition, it also announced
    that it was publishing a full page ad from Armenian sources free of
    charge. All of this, it turns out, in response to the fact that the
    Ankara Chamber of Commerce gave a paid-for ad and a DVD aiming at
    "promoting tourism to Turkey" which some then claimed aimed to "deny
    the genocide and trick people with lies."

    As you can see, some of the things we do just wind up making the
    situation messier. Because up until now, no one has stepped forward
    to coordinate this business for Turkey, neither the government, nor
    the Foreign Ministry in particular.

    Never mind the DVD business though. I wonder whether Abdullah Gul has
    even heard of the British Turkish Federation's move to have January
    27 be made into a "Remembering our Slain Diplomats Day"? Both Mehmet
    Baydar and Bahadir Demir were two Turkish diplomats slain by the
    militant Armenian group ASALA.
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