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STOCKHOLM: Reinfeldt Reassures Erdogan

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  • STOCKHOLM: Reinfeldt Reassures Erdogan

    SR International - Radio Sweden
    March 14 2010


    Reinfeldt Reassures Erdogan

    Updated 16:00

    The Swedish Government continues to distance itself from the decision
    in the Swedish parliament to recognise the deaths of Armenians in the
    Ottoman Empire as genocide.

    In a phone call on Saturday, Sweden's Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt
    ensured his Turkish counterparts Recep Tayyip Erdogan that he did not
    agree with the decision.

    "I said I regretted the decision in parliament because of the bad
    timing, since a reconciliation process has started, which is seen as
    important by both parties, Armenians and Turkey," Reinfeldt told
    Swedish Radio News at a press conference on Sunday, which he had
    called to explain his position.

    Also in his conversation with Erdogan, Reinfeldt said he expressed his
    concern over what he fears is "a new foreign policy" where historical
    events are turned into party politics, rather than leaving it to
    historians and academics to decide what has or has not happened - "as
    we did before, in broad agreement with the Social Democrats".

    With the Swedish Government being one of Turkey's strongest backers in
    its bid to join the European Union, Reinfeldt made sure to tell
    Erdogan that Sweden would continue to back Turkey in this.

    "Sweden is a fond supporter of the reform efforts that Prime Minister
    Erdogan and his party represent in Turkey", Reinfeldt said. Efforts
    that according to Reinfeldt "have lead to a reconciliation process
    with Armenia, democracy initiative and opening up of issues regarding
    minority rights."

    Meanwhile, a Social Democratic newspaper has dug up an interview from
    2006 with Reinfeldt where he - ahead of the Swedish elections that
    year - supports the idea of defining the killings of Armenians in the
    beginning of last century as genocide. That point of view seems to be
    abandoned today.

    Also on Saturday, at informal meeting of EU's foreign ministers in
    Finland, the foreign ministers of Turkey and Sweden jointly condemned
    the vote, Reuters reports.

    "It is regrettable because I think the politicisation of history
    serves no useful purpose," the Swedish minister Carl Bildt told
    reporters.

    "We are interested in the business of reconciliation, and decisions
    like that tend to raise tensions rather than lower tensions," he said.

    http://www.sr.se/cgi-bin/International/nyhe tssidor/artikel.asp?ProgramID54&format=1&a rtikel=3507733
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