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German lawmakers to press Turkey to confront Armenian massacre

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  • German lawmakers to press Turkey to confront Armenian massacre

    German lawmakers to press Turkey to confront Armenian massacre
    By STEPHEN GRAHAM

    AP Worldstream; Jun 15, 2005

    German lawmakers have prepared a cross-party motion urging Turkey
    to re-examine the disputed killing of an estimated 1 million ethnic
    Armenians about a century ago, according to a copy obtained by The
    Associated Press on Wednesday.

    The motion, to be put to a vote in parliament Thursday, demands that
    the German government press Turkey to investigate the killing and
    foster reconciliation with Armenians, including "forgiveness for
    historical guilt."

    Parliament is "convinced an honest historical review is needed and
    represents the most important basis for reconciliation," the motion
    said. "This is particularly true in the framework of a European
    culture of remembrance which includes openly debating the dark side
    of each nation's history."

    Armenia accuses Turkey of genocide in the killings as part of a 1915-23
    campaign to force Armenians out of eastern Anatolia. At that time,
    Armenia was part of the Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey remains extremely sensitive to the issue. It denies that the
    killings were genocide, says the death count is inflated and that
    Armenians were killed or displaced along with others as the Ottoman
    Empire tried to quell civil unrest.

    Officials from the governing Social Democrats and the main conservative
    opposition said they expected strong support for the motion _ partly
    because it makes no mention of Turkey's bid to join the European
    Union, according to Christoph Bergner, an opposition lawmaker who
    helped draft it.

    Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder has been one of Turkey's strongest
    backers in its membership bid, but the opposition _ which hopes to
    win expected elections later this year _ has argued that it should
    be offered a lesser "privileged partnership."

    Still, "freedom of expression should be viewed as a minimum standard
    for Europe," Bergner said.

    A draft debated in the German parliament in February drew criticism
    from Ankara's ambassador in Berlin, who said it contained "prejudices,
    factual errors ... and one-sided expectations."

    The final version said "numerous independent historians, parliaments
    and international organizations describe the deportation and
    destruction of the Armenians as genocide."

    But Bergner said it avoided adopting that language as its own in an
    attempt to encourage Turkey to allow a proper discussion.

    The motion calls for the establishment of a commission of Turkish,
    Armenian and foreign historians to examine the killings and complained
    that Turkish authorities were stifling debate at home.

    It said reconciliation could help normalize relations between Turkey
    and Armenia, which have no official diplomatic ties, and bring
    stability to the Caucasus region.

    The motion said Germany had a special responsibility to bring Turks
    and Armenians together because the German Reich had turned a blind
    eye to the actions of its Ottoman ally during World War I, and urged
    the German Foreign Ministry to release its records of the period.
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