| Peter
Briner (right) explains his views on the controversial
issue (Keystone) |
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The president of the Senate
foreign-affairs committee has denied he ever said that Turkey's
massacre of Armenians would not be debated in the chamber.
Peter Briner was reported at the beginning of August as saying
that countries had no business pointing the finger at Turkey
90 years after the disputed events. |
Briner, a member of the centre-right Radical Party, maintains
the Senate's position is that a committee of historians from the
two countries involved should investigate the events of 1915.
The Swiss House of Representatives recognised the death of up to
1.8 million Armenians as genocide in 2003. But unlike many western
governments, the Swiss government does not officially speak of "genocide"
but of "mass deportation" and "massacre".
The Turkish government rejects that it was genocide, claiming that
the Armenian deaths as a result of mass evacuation and starvation
were not a result of a state-sponsored plan of extermination.
swissinfo: You say reports are false which claim you said the
Senate will never recognise the Turkish massacre of Armenians 90
years ago as genocide. What is the Senate's position regarding those
events?
Peter Briner: Those reports are based on either a misquote or a
misunderstanding and this is of course most regrettable.
What I did say was that when the Swiss House of Representatives
had [voted to] recognise the genocide, this was not an issue in
the Senate.
The policy of our government and the Senate foreign-affairs
committee is that the two countries involved, Turkey and
Armenia, should investigate the terrible events of 1915 with a committee
of historians from both sides.
swissinfo: Two years ago the House of Representatives recognised
the massacre as genocide. Why did the debate not pass to the Senate?
P.B.: The House of Representatives vote was only [in response to]
a motion and not on the parliament's agenda. We discussed this and
we felt that the policy of our government was the wiser course.
swissinfo: So the Armenian question is still a topic of discussion
for the Senate?
P.B.: I can never be sure what will be on the Senate's agenda, of
course, but right now the postponement of Economics Minister Joseph
Deiss' invitation to Turkey will certainly be discussed during our
next committee meeting on August 23.
swissinfo: Why won't the Senate recognise the Armenian deaths
as genocide like other western countries?
P.B.: I think that the position of our government is the better
one. I don't feel comfortable being the judge of the whole world
and of something that happened a long time ago.
These are evidently terrible events and I think that they should
be investigated, but they should be primarily investigated by the
parties involved.
swissinfo: How would you describe Swiss-Turkish relations at
the moment?
P.B.: They are normally good we felt this when a delegation
of the Senate foreign-affairs committee visited the Turkish parliament
last September. Then a Turkish delegation visited us this summer
and we talked about these things in a friendly way.
Relations have of course been strained by recent events but I think
in the long run good relations will prevail. I think relations between
the two countries will remain good and prosper as they have done
in the past.
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