Scholar Backs Turkish-Armenian “Genocide” Study

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Armenia — Hayk Demoyan, director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, speaks at a news conference on September 7, 2009.

 
07.09.2009
Sargis Harutyunyan

A well-known Armenian genocide scholar voiced support on Monday for official Yerevan’s and Ankara’s plans to form a joint body tasked with looking into the mass killings of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey.

The creation of such a body is a key provision of one of the two draft protocols on the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations that were made public by the two governments last week. It is supposed to engage in an “impartial scientific examination of historical documents and archives” relating to the 1915-1918 massacres.

The idea of such a study appears to be unpopular in Armenia and its worldwide Diaspora. Many Armenians — and political opponents of President Serzh Sarkisian in particular — view it as a Turkish ploy designed to discourage more countries from recognizing the deaths of more than one million Armenians as genocide.

Hayk Demoyan, the director of the state-run Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute in Yerevan, dismissed these concerns, claiming that the Turkish-Armenian panel would only pose a threat to Turkey’s ruling establishment that vehemently denies that the massacres constituted a genocide. He said its Armenian members would gain access to Ottoman archives dating back to the First World War and thereby be able to uncover more evidence of what many international historians believe was the first genocide of the 20th century.

Speaking at a news conference, Demoyan claimed that the purpose and format of the study is different from the one proposed by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in a 2005 letter to then President Robert Kocharian. “Reading the document and its formulations, we can see that this is not what the Turkish side meant,” he said.

Government critics found Demoyan’s arguments unconvincing, however. Gegham Manukian, a historian affiliated with the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), said they are at odds with pro-government politicians’ assurances that the genocide issue will not be the main focus of the Turkish-Armenian “sub-commission” of historians. “That means that the genocide issue will be discussed there after all,” he told RFE/RL.

Manukian also stood by Dashnaktsutyun’s and other opposition parties’ that the Turks will now find it easier to keep foreign governments and parliaments from issuing Armenian genocide resolutions.

https://www.azatutyun.am/a/1816784.html


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4 responses to “Scholar Backs Turkish-Armenian “Genocide” Study”

  1. WITHOUT THE ARMENIA GENOCIDE RCOGNITION CANNOT BE REACHED TRUST, PEACE and MUTUAL CONFIDENCE.

    REAL RELATIONS can be between ARMENIA and TURKEY after THE ARMENIA GENOCIDE RCOGNITION !!!

    IT IS OBVIOUS!

  2. WITHOUT THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RCOGNITION CANNOT BE REACHED TRUST, PEACE and MUTUAL CONFIDENCE.

    REAL RELATIONS between ARMENIA and TURKEY can be after THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RCOGNITION !!!

    IT IS OBVIOUS!

  3. On the morning news Jean Schmidt is heard telling a constiuent she believes Obama was born in Kenya.

    Guys, you need some quality control. She’s your Turkish Caucus Chair!

  4. Roza=Sona=JDA=The Rat,

    Will one Armenian scholar’s voice amount to anything when countered by the roar of the dashnak party? He’s very courageous, but he’ll never get the archives in Yerevan and Boston to open up!!! The dashnaks will simply reactivate one of their terrorist groups and take him out, then as usual, they try and blame Turkey for his assination! This is merely standard Armenian dashnak SOP!!!
    Can you PROVE, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Obama wasn’t born in Kenya? No one knows where he was born! But just like the Armenian diaspora’s house of lies, both are close to collapse! Tick tock…tick tock!

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