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ANKARA: Besnainou: Turkey's membership is in EU's interest

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  • ANKARA: Besnainou: Turkey's membership is in EU's interest

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    Jan 19 2007

    Besnainou: Turkey's membership is in EU's interest

    Turkey's European Union membership is in the interests of the EU
    itself, said Pierre Besnainou, chair of the European Jewish Council,
    on Thursday, adding, "Turkey is a country that can also positively
    contribute to the stability of the region."

    Besnainou met with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    during a visit to Ankara yesterday, a meeting he later described as
    "very interesting."

    Speaking to reporters following his meeting with the premier,
    Besnainou expressed his firm belief that Turkey's EU membership will
    benefit both sides, and underlined Turkey's positive role in the
    Middle East. "Turkey is a country that can ensure stability in the
    region, and this has been Turkey's policy for many years," Besnainou
    said. He also expressed belief that Turkey can be effective in
    convincing the Palestinians to reassure Israel about the condition of
    an Israeli soldier who was abducted early last summer. Adding that he
    also discussed with Prime Minister Erdogan rising anti-Semitism in
    Europe, Besnainou said he was happy with the situation of the Jewish
    minority in Turkey.

    Asked to comment on the Armenian genocide claims, Besnainou said he
    supports the approach by Erdogan for reconciliation with the
    Armenians. "We believe that Turkey's opening all its archives to
    historians and scholars will help illuminate this matter," he added.

    The Turkish government is seeking the support of the strong Jewish
    lobby, particularly in the U.S., to block efforts for recognition of
    the so-called Armenian genocide. A draft resolution seeking
    recognition of the Armenian genocide claims is likely to be approved
    by the U.S. House of Representatives this week.

    Turkey strongly opposes the claims that its predecessor state, the
    Ottoman government, caused Armenian deaths in a planned genocide. The
    Turkish government has said the toll is wildly inflated and that
    Armenians were killed or displaced in civil unrest during the
    empire's collapse and World War I conditions. Ankara's proposal to
    Yerevan to set up a joint commission of historians to study the
    events of 1915 is still awaiting a positive response from the
    Armenian side.
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