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BEIRUT: Armenian protest mocks Turkey's peacemaking credentials

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  • BEIRUT: Armenian protest mocks Turkey's peacemaking credentials

    Daily Star - Lebanon
    Jan 3 2007

    Armenian protest mocks Turkey's peacemaking credentials

    By Maria Abi-Habib
    Special to The Daily Star
    Thursday, January 04, 2007

    BEIRUT: About 300 Armenian-Lebanese protested Wednesday's visit
    to Beirut by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, arguing
    that his country's bloody past made it impossible for him to foster
    reconciliation among Lebanon's squabbling political parties.

    "I know what Turkey has done in its past - it murdered Arabs,
    Armenians and Kurds, all those who wanted to live with Turks," said
    Shiraz Djeredjian, an American University of Beirut student. "Now
    Turkey is coming because they want to join the EU, but we know they
    can't be mediators. It's not in their culture to be peacekeepers;
    their culture is blood and murder - murder is in their blood."

    Erdogan visited Lebanon to help broker an agreement between the
    Lebanese government and its opposition.

    Turkish peacekeeping troops which constitute part of the United Nations
    Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) were also on the visit's agenda.

    Yet the Armenian diaspora in Lebanon is skeptical about Turkey's
    intentions.

    "The main issue is that we know [Turkey's] history and I don't trust
    them," said Vatche Moughalian, 31. "Just recently Turkey refused to
    open its sea ports to Cyprus. They are coming here to show they can
    be mediators to get into the EU. Let them try to sort out their own
    country's relations first. Then maybe we'll start trusting them."

    Turkey does not recognize the killing of 1.5 million Armenians in
    1915-17 or accept that the massacres were attempted genocide.

    Instead, Turkey claims the deaths were the result of inter-ethnic
    discord, disease and famine that plagued the region during World War I.

    Turkey's vehement genocide denial is one of several obstacles the
    country faces in its bid to join the EU. Out of 27 EU countries,
    12 believe the Armenian deaths were genocidal.

    Lebanon's Parliament officially recognized the genocide in 2000,
    the only Middle Eastern country to do so. In total, 16 countries
    worldwide officially believe Turkey attempted Armenian genocide.

    Armenians were forced to flee from Turkey through Syria. Many survivors
    settled in Lebanon. By 1926 there were 75,000 Armenians in Lebanon.

    "In Lebanon we are diverse peoples living together," said Shadia
    Hashem, who is not Armenian but attended the protest to show her
    solidarity. "How can the government bring someone from Turkey when
    that country has historically divided and persecuted non-Turks?"

    In the Ottoman Empire, which included Lebanon, non-Turks and
    non-Muslims often bore the brunt of discrimination.

    Many protesters were thankful for the support Lebanon's government
    has given to Armenians, though they were offended Erdogan was invited
    to Beirut.

    "We don't want Turkish troops or politicians in Lebanon, as Lebanon
    is our second home and we love it," said Vanig Dakessian. "How can
    a country that [created] genocides in the 20th century - not only of
    Armenians - come to make peace without first apologizing?"

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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