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ANKARA: Young Armenians Split Over "Genocide" Issue

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  • ANKARA: Young Armenians Split Over "Genocide" Issue

    YOUNG ARMENIANS SPLIT OVER "GENOCIDE" ISSUE

    Hurriye
    Sept 10 2008
    Turkey

    Young Armenian liberals think the actions and attitudes of Tashnaks,
    known for their radical stance against Turkey, damage Armenia, the
    Turkish Daily News (TDN) wrote on Wednesday.

    The Tashnaks have set 'genocide' as precondition for the development
    of bilateral relations between Turkey and Armenia.

    To what degree Armenians' claims of genocide should be a determining
    factor in Turkish - Armenian relations remains an open debate in
    Yerevan, the TDN reported, citing discussions between young Armenians,
    both radicals and liberals.

    Unless the 1915 incidents are recognized as "genocide" the
    Armenian nation would not favor a dialogue with Turkey, according
    to Isxhan Saxatelyan, a radical member of the Armenian Revolutionary
    Dashnaksutyun Bureau.

    Armenia, with the backing of the diaspora, claims up to 1.5 million
    of their kin were slaughtered in orchestrated killings in 1915. Turkey
    rejects the claims, saying that 300,000 Armenians along with at least
    as many Turks died in civil strife that emerged when Armenians took
    up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia.

    In 2005, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan took a first step
    towards resolving the issue by proposing a joint commission of
    historians launch an investigation and publish their conclusions,
    but the proposal was rejected by Yerevan.

    However Aren Manukyan, a liberal Armenian Manukyan disagreed. "I am
    an Armenian too. And 'genocide' definitely gives me as much pain than
    it gives them. Tashnaks should give up using the issue of 'genocide'
    for their own benefit. They have no right to exploit such a sensitive
    issue," he said.

    Manukyan was critical of the strongly nationalist party the Tashnaks'
    current stance.

    "Tashnaks do not want the borders between Armenia and Turkey to be
    opened because if they are opened they would let loose the chance to
    exploit this country - both mentally and materially. They are simply
    afraid of losing their comfort."

    "TURKEY SETS CONDITIONS" Turkey has turned toward Armenia because
    it is seeking regional dialogue after witnessing the most recent
    developments in the Caucasus, Saxatelyan said.

    "But there is one thing that Turkey forgets as it is searching for a
    dialogue: Borders between Armenia and Turkey were closed unilaterally
    by Turkey," he said.

    Turkey constantly sets various conditions related to the issues of
    "genocide," Nagorno-Karabagh and the diaspora and asks Armenia to
    comply with them, said Saxatelyan, adding Armenia would not back off
    on any of these issues.

    "If Gul had not come, no such demonstration would have taken place. As
    the world's attention focused on us, we wanted to take the ball
    and remind the world once again about the issue of genocide," he
    said regarding the demonstration Tashnaks held during Gul's arrival
    to Yerevan.

    TASHNAK NOT REFLECTIVE OF ARMENIANS Manukyan disagreed with Saxatelyan,
    saying the Tashnaks' demonstrations did not reflect Armenian citizens'
    general attitude. Even many of those who voted for the Tashnak party
    have decided to end their support, he said.

    "They organized a demonstration simply for the sake of organizing
    a demonstration. Their purpose is just to cause tension. Indeed,
    holding demonstrations have become the life and soul of the Tashnak
    party," he said.

    Manukyan says Armenia should never set recognition of "genocide"
    as a condition for Turkish-Armenian relations to develop.

    He said historical documents on the "genocide" do exist in libraries
    in various parts of the world, but disagreed with the idea that
    a commission of Turkish and Armenian historians should conduct
    collaborative studies on the issue.

    "All archives in different parts of the world can be opened to Turkish
    researchers. If they want, they can peruse all of them. And we can
    help them in any way possible. If that happens, they will see the
    facts. In fact, they are already aware of that," said Manukyan.

    Gul paid last week a landmark visit to Yerevan after Armenian President
    Serzh Sargsyan invited him to watch a 2010 World Cup qualifying match
    between the two countries' national teams.

    Turkey is among the first countries that recognized Armenia when it
    declared its independency in the early 1990s.

    However there are no diplomatic relations between the two countries,
    as Armenia presses the international community to admit the so-called
    "genocide" claims instead of accepting Turkey's call to investigate the
    allegations, and its invasion of 20 percent of Azerbaijani territory
    despite U.N. Security Council resolutions on the issue.

    The border between the two countries has remained closed since 1993,
    when Turkey protested Armenia's occupation of the Nagorno-Karabakh
    region of Azerbaijan, a close Turkish ally.
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