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Turkey Warns Of Diplomatic Damage Over Armenian Issue

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  • Turkey Warns Of Diplomatic Damage Over Armenian Issue

    TURKEY WARNS OF DIPLOMATIC DAMAGE OVER ARMENIAN ISSUE
    By Andrew Borowiec

    Washington Times, DC
    May 11 2006

    NICOSIA, Cyprus -- Turkey this week summoned its ambassadors to France
    and Canada for consultation in an escalating row over the World War
    I massacres of more than 1 million Armenians.

    The government in Ankara has warned of "irreparable damage" to its
    relations with France if the National Assembly approved law to make
    any denial of the massacre a criminal offense.

    In Canada, Prime Minister Stephen Harper recently referred to the
    deaths of Turkish Armenians as genocide, drawing Turkish ire.

    In an unusual move, the Turkish Foreign Ministry has suggested that
    the French government should prevent the adoption of the denial bill
    by the lower house of parliament.

    "Accepting this draft law would cause irreparable damage to
    Turkish-French relations. It should not be permitted," the ministry
    said.

    Unlike Germany, which has acknowledged the Holocaust of the Nazi era
    and compensated some of the survivors, Turkey dismisses the massive
    documentation of the Armenian massacres by the Ottomans.

    The European Parliament has already approved a nonbinding resolution
    requiring Turkey to recognize the death of Armenians as genocide
    before it is admitted to the European Union.

    The draft bill before the French National Assembly was strongly
    influenced by the presence in France of some 400,000 Armenians,
    the largest Armenian diaspora in Europe. Many are active in French
    political life.

    Turkish authorities continue to oppose any public discussion of
    the Armenian problem. Several journalists have been charged with
    violating the code on "insulting Turkishness" for writing about the
    90-year-old massacres.

    However, under strong EU pressure, similar charges were dropped
    against Orhan Pamuk, an internationally known Turkish novelist who
    had called on Turkey to admit its guilt.

    According to the prevailing Turkish version, Armenians living in
    Turkey had to be resettled in the desert areas of the Ottoman Empire
    because they were "the fifth column" on behalf of Russia and the
    Western Allies.

    Turkey fought on the side of Germany and Austria in World War I.

    According to the version of the London-based Minority Rights Group,
    in the spring of 1915, less than a year after the start of the war,
    "Turkish Armenians in the Ottoman army were disarmed and herded into
    labor battalions where they were starved, beaten or machine-gunned.

    "A 'resettlement campaign' followed in which most Armenian men were
    summarily executed while women and children were "forced to walk
    southward in huge convoys to the burning desert of northern Syria.

    Few survived the privations of these terrible death marches."

    The Minority Rights Group concluded that before 1914 over 2 million
    Armenians lived under the Ottomans, but the figure has hardly exceeded
    100,000 since World War I.

    "Thus the number of Armenian dead may safely be put at around
    1,500,000. Another half a million became homeless refugees whose
    descendants, with their tragic memories, can be found today in a
    score of countries."
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