Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Germany rejects Turkish objections to Armenia resolution

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

  • Germany rejects Turkish objections to Armenia resolution

    Germany rejects Turkish objections to Armenia resolution

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    June 17, 2005, Friday

    Berlin

    In a widening rift with Turkey, the German government Friday rejected
    Turkish objections to a resolution adopted by the German parliament
    this week condemning the massacre of up to 1.5 million ethnic Armenians
    in the Ottoman Empire 90 years ago.

    Responding to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's
    denunciation of the resolution as "a hideous action", German Chancellor
    Gerhard Schroeder issued a statement defending the resolution.

    "The chancellor has consistently made his stand on the issue,"
    said Schroeder's deputy spokesman Thomas Steg. "We therefore cannot
    understand (Turkey's) surprise at this resolution."

    The resolution, adopted by an overwhelming majority of the Bundestag
    lower house of the German parliament, criticised the current government
    of Turkey for "neglecting to address the issue" in a forthright manner.

    The Turkish government called the resolution as "irresponsible,
    appalling and injurious" to relations between the two countries.
    Germany's two million Turkish immigrants make up the largest ethnic
    group in this country, and Turkish leaders in Germany have called
    the resolution "discriminatory" against Turks living here.

    Turkey acknowledges the tragedy of hundreds of thousands of deaths in
    "civil strife" during 1915-17 but denies there was a state- sponsored
    extermination plan - a stance that has complicated its efforts to join
    the European Union. Accession talks are due to start later this year.

    On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Turkish government arrested hundreds
    of Armenian intellectuals and community leaders, most of whom were
    quickly executed.

    This was followed by the mass relocation of Christian Armenians from
    Anatolia through desert to Mesopotamia and what is today Syria.

    Starvation, disease, attacks by bandits and the brutality of the
    escorting troops resulted in mass fatalities. Most Western sources
    maintain that more than a million deaths took place.

    The incident has been widely referred to as the first genocide of
    the 20th Century.

    Turkey said Thursday's resolution is not historically correct, saying
    claims that "almost all Armenians living in Anatolia were exterminated"
    have "no basis". dpa eg sc
Working...
X