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Armenians' deaths still hit nerve in Turkey

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  • Armenians' deaths still hit nerve in Turkey

    Armenians' deaths still hit nerve in Turkey
    By Catherine Collins

    Chicago Tribune
    June 3 2005

    Special to the Tribune
    Published June 3, 2005

    ISTANBUL -- When Turkey's justice minister leveled an accusation of
    treason at the organizers of a conference questioning the government's
    stance on the mass killings of Armenians, the event was abruptly
    postponed and controversy arose in its place.

    The minister's harsh remarks last month drew domestic and international
    criticism from academics, the media and the public.

    For Turkey's ruling party, Justice and Development Party, the result
    was another black eye in its attempt to convince an increasingly
    skeptical European Union that Turkey indeed embraces its democratic
    ideals, including free speech.

    Few issues are touchier in Turkey than the plight of hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians in the waning days of the Ottoman Empire.

    Armenia says 1.5 million Ottoman Armenians were systematically killed
    during and after World War I. Turkey disputes those numbers, putting
    them much lower and says it was partisan conflict in which as many
    as 350,000 Turks also died.

    While ethnic Armenians are mounting an increasingly successful campaign
    to get the events recognized as a genocide, Ankara has steadfastly
    refused to budge from its position.

    The EU has urged Turkey to improve relations with neighboring Armenia
    as part of Turkey's bid to join the organization. In an attempt to
    promote discussion, Bosphorus University, a prestigious state school
    in Istanbul, planned a conference to debate the official policy.

    But Justice Minister Cemil Cicek saw it as an attempt to undermine
    the government's efforts to counter the Armenian campaign, which
    has persuaded 15 countries to pass resolutions labeling the killings
    genocide.

    "We must put an end to this cycle of treason and insult, of spreading
    propaganda against the nation by people who belong to it," Cicek said,
    adding the conference was "a stab in the back to the Turkish nation."

    It might not have been an idle threat. An academic involved with the
    conference said the governor of Istanbul cautioned the university that
    he might not be able to provide security for the meeting, and a state
    prosecutor phoned the university to request copies of presentations
    before they were given.

    Universities in Turkey are tightly controlled by the state, and
    conference organizers said they feared retaliation and restrictions
    on academic freedom if they proceeded.

    "We are anxious that, as a state university, scientific freedom will
    be compromised due to prejudices about a conference that has not yet
    occurred," the university said in a statement last month.
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