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ANKARA: Armenians Criticized Gonul With A Letter To Prime Minister E

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  • ANKARA: Armenians Criticized Gonul With A Letter To Prime Minister E

    ARMENIANS CRITICIZED GONUL WITH A LETTER TO PRIME MINISTER ERDOGAN

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 13 2008
    Turkey

    A group of more than 40 Turkish-Armenians, in an open letter to
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, have voiced their grievances
    about remarks from Defense Minister Vecdi Gönul that defended the
    deportation of Greeks and Armenians from Anatolia at the beginning
    of the last century, describing his comments as "praising ethnic
    cleansing and crime."

    Gönul, in a speech at the Turkish Embassy in Brussels on the occasion
    of the anniversary of the death of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk on Nov. 10,
    claimed that if Greeks and Armenians were still living in the country,
    Turkey would not be the same nation-state it is today. He also hinted
    that Armenia is supporting the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

    "If there were Greeks in the Aegean and Armenians in most places in
    Turkey today, would it be the same nation-state? I don't know with
    which words I can explain the importance of the population exchange,
    but if you look at the former state of affairs, its importance will
    become very clear," Gönul said. The Lausanne Treaty, signed in 1923,
    called for a population exchange between the Greek Orthodox citizens
    of the young Turkish Republic and the Muslim citizens of Greece,
    which resulted in the displacement of approximately 2 million people.

    The Armenian population that was in Turkey before the establishment
    of Turkish Republic was forced to emigrate in 1915, and the conditions
    of this expulsion are the basis of Armenian claims of genocide.

    In the same speech, Gönul hinted that Armenians are supporting the
    PKK. "We cannot deny the contribution of those who consider themselves
    the victims of this nation-building, especially the forced emigration,
    to the struggle in the southeastern Anatolia," he said.

    The group, in their open letter published on a Web site, stated that
    Gönul's remarks contradict the Constitution, which says that anyone
    bound to the Turkish Republic by the citizenship is called a Turk.

    "It is very difficult to understand, if we are talking about a
    Turkish nation, why the Armenians and Greeks [non-Muslims] cannot
    be a part of this nation, when Kurds, Arabs and Albanians [Muslims]
    can be? To what extent does this mentality, which underlines that
    religious unity is required in order to be a nation, fit in with the
    contemporary state of law?" the letter asked.

    The letter suggested that the changes made by the ruling Justice and
    Development Party (AK Party) toward democratization were considered
    by intellectuals to be "positive," but that the rivals of the AK
    Party claimed these changes are just a disingenuous effort to get
    the financial support of the European Union.

    "The reaction of the AK party to Gönul's scandalous remarks will be
    a very good indicator of the sincerity of the policies [of AK Party],"
    the letter claimed.

    --Boundary_(ID_o2JqsCyHMuGfFpzdtV/Q/A)--
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