Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Deiss "is welcome" to visit Turkey

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Deiss "is welcome" to visit Turkey

    Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Switzerland
    June 15 2005

    Deiss "is welcome" to visit Turkey


    Swiss Economics Minister Joseph Deiss is welcome to visit Turkey as
    planned in the autumn, according to a senior Turkish parliamentarian.



    The renewed invitation comes just days after the trip was thrown into
    doubt following a diplomatic row with Ankara over a Swiss
    investigation into a Turkish historian.

    Mehmet Dülger, head of the foreign-affairs committee of the Turkish
    Grand National Assembly, told swissinfo that he had no reason to
    doubt that Deiss's visit would go ahead as planned in September.

    "I am sure that this visit will take place in Istanbul in September,"
    said Dülger. "We are all convinced that this would be a very useful
    trip and a welcome opportunity to further [economic ties]."

    He was speaking on the second day of the foreign-affairs committee's
    week-long trip to Switzerland which has so far included meetings with
    Deiss and Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey.

    The visit was overshadowed last week by news that the Turkish trade
    minister, Kürsad Tüzman, had cancelled plans to speak later this
    month at the Swiss-Turkish Business Council in Zurich. It also
    emerged that Deiss's trip to Turkey was unlikely to take place as
    scheduled.

    Newspapers in Ankara reported that Tüzman had decided not to travel
    to Switzerland in protest at the treatment of Turkish historian Yusuf
    Halacoglu.

    Last month the cantonal prosecutor's office in the Swiss city of
    Winterthur launched an investigation into claims that Halacoglu had
    violated anti-racism laws by playing down the massacre of Armenians
    in 1915-18 during a speech in Switzerland in 2004.

    Testing times
    Turkey and Switzerland have been at odds over the Armenian question
    since 2003, when canton Vaud's parliament ? and later the House of
    Representatives ? voted to recognise the killings as genocide.

    Armenians say around 1.8 million people were killed. Turkey disputes
    this, putting the figure closer to 200,000.

    But Dülger rejected suggestions that Swiss-Turkish relations could
    suffer as a result of the investigation into Halacoglu's comments on
    Armenia.

    The Turkish ambassador to Bern, Alev Kiliç, added that he had been
    assured by the Swiss authorities that there was "no reason to be
    concerned" about the case against the historian.

    "It seems that an official complaint was made [about what Halacoglu
    said] and the prosecutor therefore had no choice but to launch an
    investigation," said Kiliç.

    "Our understanding is that the legal proceedings now have to run
    their natural course."

    Dülger confirmed that Halacoglu's case had come up during discussions
    with government officials.

    But he made it clear that the focus of the talks ? which included
    meetings with Swiss parliamentary colleagues ? was on how to
    strengthen bilateral ties.

    The five-member Turkish delegation travels to Geneva on Wednesday for
    meetings at the World Trade Organization and the United Nations. The
    parliamentarians move on to Zurich on Thursday for talks with Swiss
    business leaders.

    --Boundary_(ID_RI6POkCk7jSV6dGoDOqx1Q)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X