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ANKARA: Erdogan Dismisses Foreign Pressure on Armenian Issue

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  • ANKARA: Erdogan Dismisses Foreign Pressure on Armenian Issue

    Erdogan Dismisses Foreign Pressure on Armenian Issue

    The New Anatolian
    19 May 2005

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday that Ankara
    rejects outsiders' "lobbying efforts" on the so-called Armenian
    genocide, and said other countries should open their archives on
    the period.

    Erdogan's comments at the 46-nation Council of Europe summit came after
    Armenia's president, Robert Kocharian, speaking at the same gathering
    on Monday, had underlined his country's call for the killings to be
    recognized as genocide.

    Erdogan belittled Kocharian's speech, describing his words as,
    "Playing for the tribunes and self-satisfaction."

    "We do not appreciate any lobbying efforts that do not have their
    basis in documents," Erdogan said. "Taking action in other parliam
    ents will not have positive effects on the issue."

    Erdogan recently sent a letter to the Armenian president inviting
    Armenia to set up a committee of historians to jointly research the
    killings. "We are opening up our military archives and we ask for
    Armenia to do the same," he said yesterday. "If other countries have
    pertinent information, let them open their archives."

    Several countries, including Argentina, Canada, France, and Russia,
    have declared the killings as genocide, and there is strong pressure
    from Armenians worldwide for the U.S. Congress to recognize the
    killings as genocide as well.

    Erdogan reacted to the international pressure by threatening to pass
    a similar decision in the Turkish Parliament. "If they go further in
    their attempt to pressure Turkey, we will pass a similar decision
    from our Parliament against countries that have committed genocide
    in history," he said during the press conference after the meeting.

    Calling on world leaders to build the future on love and peace,
    rather than hatred and enmity, Erdogan criticized the countries
    whose parliaments have formally accepted the events of the early
    1900s as genocide.

    "You should understand this: These kinds of decisions will never
    bind us," Erdogan said. "We convey our thoughts very sincerely to
    Kocharian. And they reply to us with a document containing a more
    positive approach compared to that of the past. We hope that they
    will improve this approach in a positive way."

    Asked about a possible decision by the Belgian Parliament to crimalize
    denying the Armenian genocide, Erdogan was highly critical.

    "I could not place these kind of decisions anywhere within the legal
    platform," he said. "I think that any decision of an unrelated country
    on this issue would be unlawful."

    Stressing that Turkey has taken some positive steps towards normalizing
    its relations with Armenia such as opening its airspace to Armenian
    planes and the restoration of the Armenian church at Van, Erdogan
    added, "We're sending out these signals. If they don't receive them,
    I will only leave them to the appreciation of humanity."
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