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Turks defy labeling of WWI Armenian deaths as genocide

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  • Turks defy labeling of WWI Armenian deaths as genocide

    Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX
    May 12 2006

    Turks defy labeling of WWI Armenian deaths as genocide

    By BENJAMIN HARVEY


    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/MURAD SEZER
    Protesters with the Workers' Party hold posters saying, "The genocide
    lie is an American game," left, and "The Armenian genocide is an
    international lie" at the French consulate in Istanbul, Turkey.

    ISTANBUL, Turkey -- Turkey has pulled out of a military exercise in
    Canada and hinted at economic repercussions against France, stepping
    up protests of accusations that Turks committed genocide against
    Armenians during World War I.

    The Turkish government this week briefly recalled ambassadors from
    NATO allies France and Canada to protest the Canadian Prime Minister
    Stephen Harper's declaration last month that the killings of
    Armenians constituted genocide, and a French bill that would outlaw
    denying that Armenians were genocide victims. The ambassadors
    returned Thursday after four days in Turkey.

    The Turkish Foreign Ministry said Thursday that it was pulling out of
    an Air Force training exercise in Canada, to which it had been
    expected to send officers and several F-16 fighters.

    "This decision is Turkey's and we would not comment on why they have
    made this decision," said Pamela Greenwell, a spokeswoman for
    Canada's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan held a private meeting in
    Ankara on Tuesday with representatives of large French firms with
    investments in Turkey, where he warned of serious harm to relations
    if the genocide measure was allowed to pass.

    Armenians say as many as 1.5 million Armenians died or were killed
    over several years as part of a genocidal campaign to force them out
    of eastern Turkey. Turkey acknowledges that large numbers of
    Armenians died, but says that the overall figure is inflated and that
    the deaths occurred in the civil unrest during the collapse of the
    Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey is facing increasing pressure to fully acknowledge the
    killings, particularly as it seeks membership in the European Union.

    But many in Turkey feel that, by using the word genocide to describe
    the killings, other countries put the Ottoman Turks in the same
    category as Nazi Germans.

    Turkey has made it government policy to fight genocide assertions
    with diplomatic and economic sanctions if necessary. But it is
    unclear how far Turks are willing to go, especially if that could
    mean harming the bid to join the EU.

    "Sometimes you talk, then you have to behave according to the way you
    talk, and you get to a place you never wanted to go in the first
    place," Ilter Turan, a political scientist at Istanbul Bilgi
    University, said of whether Turkey would carry through on all its
    threats.
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