| Armenians
at the memorial in Yerevan on the 90th anniversary of
the mass killings (Keystone Archive) |
|
Turkey's massacre of Armenians
in 1915 will never be an issue for the Swiss Senate, according
to the president of the Senate foreign-affairs committee.
Peter Briner said other countries had no business pointing the
finger at Turkey 90 years after the disputed events. |
Briner said the committee had decided that the death or deportation
of 800,000-1.8 million Armenians between 1915 and 1919 would not be
the subject of a plenary session.
He said the committee agreed with the government that it was not
parliaments job to decide whether the killings constituted
genocide. They have been recognised as such by the parliaments of
several countries including France, Russia and Italy.
The Swiss House of Representatives recognised the genocide in 2003.
The Swiss government, however, does not officially speak of "genocide"
but of "mass deportation" and "massacre".
Briner said the committee believed that it was up to the parties
involved, namely Turkey and Armenia, to reach an agreement.
Disagree to disagree
Briner said a commission of historians had to "work through
the terrible events" just as Switzerland had reappraised
its history during the Second World War.
Attempts by international scholars to determine once and for all
what really happened between 1915 and 1919 have never got much further
than agreeing which two countries were involved.
In May a group of Turkish historians had to cancel a conference
debating the genocide after the Turkish justice minister accused
them of "stabbing Turkey in the back".
In June Alev Kilic, the Turkish ambassador to Bern, told swissinfo
that during Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Reys visit to
Turkey in March, the Turkish foreign minister Abdullah Gul talked
about establishing a commission of historians from both sides and
opening all files and archives.
"But of course the proposal has also been made to the Armenian
government and we cant establish anything without their agreement.
We have still not received a positive reply," said Kilic.
Sabre-rattling
A week is a long time in Swiss-Turkish politics, but diplomatic
relations need some serious resuscitation after a miserable ten
days for the two countries.
At the end of July the Swiss ambassador to Ankara had to deflect
a barrage of diplomatic flak concerning the Swiss investigation
of a Turkish politician who had proffered revisionist views about
the Armenian genocide in 1915.
Then on August 5 the Turkish authorities postponed indefinitely
a visit to Turkey in September by Swiss Economics Minister Joseph
Deiss, citing agenda problems of his Turkish counterpart.
Few in Switzerland believe an inability to use a diary was the
reason for the cancellation.
"Thats a typical diplomatic excuse if you cant
think of a better one," said Briner.
"The important thing is that we now show some guts,"
he said. "I get the impression that the Turkish government
wants to placate its people with this sabre-rattling."
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