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Armenia Agreed To Compromise In Exposition About Genocide

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  • Armenia Agreed To Compromise In Exposition About Genocide

    ARMENIA AGREED TO COMPROMISE IN EXPOSITION ABOUT GENOCIDE

    Arminfo Agency
    2007-05-01 21:02:00

    An exhibition, dedicated to the Rwanda Genocide, has opened in the UN
    after three-week delay that was provoked by Turkey, which insisted
    on the change of part of the exposition, dedicated to the Armenian
    Genocide, "Gazeta.ru" reports. According to the representative of the
    Aegis British organization, part of the exhibition, dedicated to the
    Armenian Genocide, was initially opened with words "After the First
    World War, during which a million of Armenians were killed in Turkey, a
    Polish attorney Rafael Lemkin called the League of Nations to recognize
    the barbarous crimes the international crimes". The new text reads:
    "In 1993, a Polish Jew, attorney Rafael Lemkin, called the League
    of Nations to recognize the massacres on grounds of belonging to any
    specific group the international crime. He indicated the massacre of
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during the First World War and other
    massacres in history. No one listed to him".

    The Ambassador of Armenia to the UN said that the compromise
    formulation is not good enough for his country, however, it is better
    than the endless delay of the exhibition opening. The opinion of the
    Turkish diplomats remained unknown, since they were not present at
    the exposition opening. Assisted by Great Britain, USA and Russia,
    official Ankara intends to take specific steps to persuade Armenia
    to accept Turkey's proposal concerning the creation of a joint
    commission for the Armenian Genocide study. As the Turkish "Zaman"
    reported earlier, this decision of Turkey is dictated, first of all,
    by apprehensions of adoption of the Armenian Genocide Resolution by
    the US Congress that, in the opinion of Turkish diplomats, will affect
    the American-Turkish relations. The article author recalls that in
    2005, the Prime Minister of Turkey Recep Erdogan expressed readiness
    for opening all the Turkish archives for the Armenian historians,
    that would help to understand "if it is possible to consider the
    murders of Armenians during the First World War as Genocide". However,
    Armenia offers to form an intergovernmental commission to study the
    whole spectrum of bilateral relations.
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