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Armenian genocide vote in Sweden sparks Turkish fury

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  • Armenian genocide vote in Sweden sparks Turkish fury

    EurActiv -
    March 12 2010


    Armenian genocide vote in Sweden sparks Turkish fury

    Published: 12 March 2010

    A diplomatic row has erupted after Sweden's parliament voted yesterday
    (11 March) to officially declare the Turkish mass killing of Armenians
    in World War I as "genocide".

    The vote, passed narrowly by just one vote in the Swedish Riksdag, led
    to immediate and furious reaction in Ankara, with Turkey recalling its
    ambassador to Stockholm and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan cancelling a planned visit to Sweden.

    The condemnation of the 1915 events was mainly driven by Sweden's
    centre-left opposition, which Erdogan accused of exploiting the issue
    in order to make political gains ahead of Sweden's general elections
    in September.

    However, centre-left parties were not alone in passing the resolution.
    They were joined by four MPs from the governing centre-right coalition
    and these votes proved decisive in securing the result. MPs who
    supported the vote described it as an important symbolic victory for
    Swedes of Armenian descent.

    The Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) welcomed the vote,
    praising Sweden as a country which "often strives to reconcile
    effectiveness and ethics in its relations with the world".

    "We applaud it for its principled and constructive stance on the
    genocide. The truth will set us all free," said Nicolas Tavitian of
    AGBU Europe.

    Big mistake, says Bildt

    But Sweden's centre-right foreign minister Carl Bildt, one of the EU's
    global diplomacy heavyweights, said he was "heavily disappointed" with
    the Riksdag's decision.

    "It is wrong to politicise history this way," he argued, blaming the
    outcome on power games among Sweden's coalition of leftist parties.
    Bildt believes the rising influence of the formerly communist Left
    party (Vänsterpartiet) was behind the vote.

    The move is likely to prove a significant setback to the previously
    excellent diplomatic relations between the two countries. Sweden has
    been one of the most vocal supporters of Turkish EU membership in
    recent years, though Bildt argued that this remained the case despite
    yesterday's vote.

    A December 2008 initiative by Turkish intellectuals apologised to
    Armenia for the mass killings (EurActiv 18/12/08). Despite the fact
    that the petition stopped short of using the word genocide, it was
    immediately condemned by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    The controversy flared up again last week when the foreign affairs
    committee of the US House of Representatives approved a non-binding
    measure condemning the killings as genocide.

    Positions
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a statement said
    he "deeply regrets" and "strongly condemns" the Swedish Parliament's
    resolution. "Our nation and Government reject this unsubstantiated
    resolution replete with immense errors".

    "It is obvious that the resolution was adopted with certain political
    calculations in view of the upcoming elections to be held in Sweden in
    September 2010. This resolution adopted with domestic political
    motives does not befit Turkey-Sweden relations and the close
    cooperation and friendship between our peoples".

    "The task of the Parliaments and politicians is not to pass judgement
    on history, but to draw lessons from the past in order to build the
    future".

    "Those who believe that historical facts and Turkey's opinion
    regarding its own history will be changed by decisions adopted by
    foreign Parliaments for political gains are gravely mistaken".

    Background
    Hundreds of thousands of Christian Armenians died during forced
    removals in 1915 by the Ottoman army from what is now Eastern Turkey,
    but Turkey denies that the move constituted genocide.

    The countries attitude vis-Ã-vis the bloodshed in 1915 is one of the
    defining aspects of modern Turkish diplomacy, with any use of the term
    `genocide' either within Turkey or abroad swiftly denounced by Ankara.

    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was killed in 2007 after openly
    saying that the events of 1915 were genocide.

    http://www.euractiv.com/en/enlargement/ swedish-condemnation-armenian-genocide-sparks-turk ish-fury-news-333762
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