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ANKARA: Turkish, Armenian historians quarrel over failed study

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  • ANKARA: Turkish, Armenian historians quarrel over failed study

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 16 2007

    Turkish, Armenian historians quarrel over failed study initiative


    Turkish and Armenian historians remained at odds following the
    failure last week of a planned joint study into the World War I
    events in eastern Anatolia, which Armenians claim amounted to
    genocide.


    Yusuf Halaçoðlu - Ara Sarafian
    Yusuf Halaçoðlu, who heads the Turkish Historical Society (TTK),
    rejected accusations from British Armenian historian Ara Sarafian
    that their plans for a joint case study on the treatment of Armenians
    in Harput in eastern Anatolia in 1915 would not work because
    Halaçoðlu said he could not provide some of the documents he
    requested.

    "I never said that we could not open some of the archives or that we
    cannot show some documents," Halaçoðlu said in a statement released
    Wednesday afternoon. He noted that he did not have the legal
    authority to impose restrictions on archive documents. Halaçoðlu,
    speaking last week, blamed the Armenian diaspora for failure of the
    initiative and said Sarafian bowed to pressure from the diaspora.

    "I particularly want to stress that Mr. Sarafian has probably been
    subject to pressure," Halaçoðlu then said. "As a matter of fact, a
    news report published by [bilingual Armenian-Turkish newspaper] Agos
    said that the Armenian diaspora was very angry with Sarafian because
    of his proposal to study with Turkish historians."

    In London, Sarafian refuted claims that he was afraid to carry out
    research with a Turkish academic and said Halaçoðlu had told him some
    of the documents he requested were not available in the Ottoman
    archives.

    "This is an incredible statement. I expect Halaçoðlu to clarify what
    this means," he said in an interview with the Cihan News Agency. "I
    am not the one who gave up on the research. I am the one who proposed
    doing research in Turkey and would love to work in this direction."

    He said, however, that his proposal was no longer on the table
    because the documents, as Halaçoðlu said, were not in the Ottoman
    archives. "If these documents are not available, then we of course
    cannot do any study," he was quoted as saying by Cihan.

    Sarafian also said he wanted to stay in contact with Turkey and that
    he favored dialogue. "I favor dialogue to show that at least those
    days when Turks and Armenians were killing each other are over," he
    said. "I believe there will be a consensus on that but I know that
    this will not be easy." He also said: "I am not a supporter of the
    Armenian diaspora who criticizes Turkey without talking to Turkish
    historians and looking into the archives. I am in favor of trying to
    work in and with Turkey as much as I can."
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