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ANKARA: 'Turkey Ready For Dialogue With Diaspora'

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  • ANKARA: 'Turkey Ready For Dialogue With Diaspora'

    'TURKEY READY FOR DIALOGUE WITH DIASPORA'

    Today's Zaman
    April 16 2010
    Turkey

    Ankara's ongoing efforts to normalize its relations with Yerevan are
    not limited to a state-to-state framework, Foreign Minister Ahmet
    Davutoglu has said, adding that Turkey wants a reconciliation process
    that also involves the Armenian diaspora living in Europe and the
    United States.

    Davutoglu said Turks and Armenians "in Paris and Boston" should
    sit together and attempt to reconcile their memories of the tragic
    events that took place in 1915, which Armenians consider a systematic
    extermination campaign but which Turks insist were merely terrible
    deaths resulting from the collapse of an empire, The Boston Globe
    reported on Wednesday.

    The minister's remarks came as he was delivering a speech and
    responding to questions from reporters at the Washington office of
    the Council on Foreign Relations on Wednesday.

    "We are ready to listen to our Armenian friends concerning our
    history," Davutoglu was quoted as saying by the Anatolia news agency.

    He said no one should unilaterally impose his/her own memory on the
    other side, recalling that 2 million Turks were forced to migrate
    from the Balkans and the Caucasus to Anatolia as those territories
    became independent from the Ottoman Empire at the beginning of the
    last century.

    Turkey rejects Armenian claims of genocide at the hands of the
    Ottoman Empire and says Turks and Armenians were both killed as
    Armenians revolted against the Ottoman Empire in collaboration with
    the Russian army with the aim of establishing an Armenian state in
    eastern Anatolia.

    Davutoglu's remarks in Washington echoed his concept of "just memory."

    In the past, he has said that procedures envisioned by protocols signed
    in October between Armenia and Turkey for establishing diplomatic
    ties and reopening their border will eventually help achieve "a just
    memory" concerning the tragedy in Anatolia during World War I.

    One of the two protocols signed by Ankara and Yerevan in October
    says the two countries have agreed to "implement a dialogue on the
    historical dimension with the aim of restoring mutual confidence
    between the two nations, including an impartial scientific examination
    of historical records and archives to define existing problems and
    formulate recommendations."

    "1915 is the year of the so-called genocide for them," Davutoglu was
    quoted as saying by The Boston Globe. "For us, we say 'pain.' We are
    ready to discuss. The same year, we had Gallipoli," he said.

    The 1915 Battle of Gallipoli was won by the defending Ottoman army
    against a joint British and French campaign and laid the groundwork
    for the Turkish War of Independence and the foundation of the Turkish
    Republic eight years later under Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

    Davutoglu said one of his grandfathers died at Gallipoli, underscoring
    the emotion that many Turks feel about that campaign, The Boston
    Globe reported.

    Also Wednesday, Davutoglu held a meeting in Washington with Turkey's
    ambassadors to Washington and Ottawa and consul-generals in Chicago,
    Houston, Los Angeles and Toronto. Davutoglu ordered the diplomats
    to engage in dialogue with the Armenian diaspora and strengthen
    this dialogue, the agency said. It is not possible to finalize the
    normalization of bilateral relations with Armenia without having
    the Armenian diaspora involved in this process, diplomatic sources,
    speaking on condition of anonymity, told Anatolia. The same sources
    highlighted that Turkey would prioritize contact with Armenian groups
    who are open to dialogue, indicating that dialogue with hard-line
    groups was not a priority for Turkey, at least at the moment.
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