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Armenia FM Reaches Out To Turkey On Genocide Recognition

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  • Armenia FM Reaches Out To Turkey On Genocide Recognition

    ARMENIA FM REACHES OUT TO TURKEY ON GENOCIDE RECOGNITION
    by Haro Chakmakjian

    Agence France Presse -- English
    November 26, 2006 Sunday 2:00 AM GMT

    Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian is reaching out to historical
    foe Turkey to normalise ties as the key step toward a political
    settlement on the ultra-sensitive issue of genocide recognition.

    "For Armenia, recognition (of the genocide) by Turkey is not
    a precondition for normal, good neighbourly relations," the
    Harvard-educated minister told AFP in an interview during a
    presidential visit to Cyprus.

    Nine decades after what the Armenians, backed by many historians,
    term the genocide of some 1.5 million of their people in the Ottoman
    empire, Oskanian said both countries needed to "transcend" the horrors
    of their common past.

    "This obstacle (of Turkish recognition) can be removed and memories
    can be ameliorated by new experiences, by interaction between the
    Turkish and Armenian people as neighbours," he said.

    However, Oskanian scoffed at a proposal from Turkish Prime Minister
    Tayyip Recep Erdogan for historians from both sides to form a
    commission to study the bloody events of 1915-1917, which Ankara
    refuses to classify as genocide.

    "Erdogan's suggestion was a smokescreen," he charged, asking how
    any joint commission could be set up without diplomatic ties between
    Ankara and Yerevan, capital of Armenia which gained independence from
    the ex-Soviet Union in 1991.

    "This is a political issue. You've got to address this issue from a
    political angle."

    Oskanian was also critical of what he called Turkey's new "state
    policy" of denial even as more countries join the ranks of states
    that officially recognise the genocide.

    "As more countries recognise, Turkey becomes -- as the record shows --
    more aggressive in its policy of denial ... The Turks have never been
    this organised at a state level to pursue a policy of denial," he said.

    Oskanian pointed to an article in Turkish law which punishes those
    who refer to the events of 1915 as genocide.

    Dozens of intellectuals -- among them 2006 Nobel literature laureate
    Orhan Pamuk -- have been brought to court under an amendment in the
    penal law that makes it a crime to denigrate Turkish identity or
    insult state institutions.

    The French parliament's adoption of a bill making public denial of
    the genocide in France punishable by law was "a clear reaction to
    the aggressive denialist policies of the Turkish government", he said.

    Oskanian held little hope in Washington exerting pressure on its
    Turkish ally on the genocide issue because of its strategic interests,
    but it "must be more assertive in calling on Turkey to open the border"
    and normalise ties.

    The minister, who himself was born in Syria, denied any gulf between
    Yerevan and Armenians of the diaspora, who outnumber their three
    million compatriots in Armenia and have been at the forefront of a
    worldwide recognition campaign.

    "It's the moral obligation of every Armenian in diaspora and in
    Armenia to remember and to pursue recognition because we think that
    will be the minimum compensation after almost 100 years," said the
    51-year-old minister.

    "Today we pursue recognition in different countries through their
    parliaments and that can only be pursued by their countries' citizens."

    Oskanian tried to allay concerns that recognition could lead to
    claims for compensation. "Armenia today has on its foreign policy
    agenda only the issue of genocide recognition. That's what we are
    after as a nation," he said.

    But he admitted that the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, a region inside
    neighbouring Azerbaijan, where the Armenians set up a breakaway state
    in 1992, posed a major obstacle for ties with Turkey.

    Ankara's "unequivocal solidarity with Azerbaijan also works against
    Turkey because it undermines their credibility and weight in the
    Caucusus ... and their claim to be a bridge between East and West",
    he charged.

    Oskanian dismissed any similarity between Karabakh and a self-declared
    Turkish Cypriot statelet in north Cyprus, insisting the former emerged
    from the collapse of the Soviet Union and the latter from a recognised
    UN member state.

    He acknowledged that Cyprus, with its division, and Armenia were
    proving obstacles to Turkey's ambition to join the European Union,
    but denied the two countries were working against Ankara.

    "The purpose of our visit (to Cyprus) was to activate economic ties.

    We do have common issues we discussed but we never ganged up against
    anyone," Oskanian said.

    On Friday, Armenian President Robert Kocharian, who hails from
    Karabakh, laid the foundation stone for a genocide monument to be
    built on the Larnaca seafront of Cyprus, where Armenian refugees from
    Ottoman Turkey landed.

    In rejecting the genocide label, Turkey argues that 250,000 to
    500,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife
    when Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia
    during World War I.
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