ANKARA: Armenians Retract Apology

ARMENIANS RETRACT APOLOGY

Hurriyet
Feb 10 2009
Turkey

ISTANBUL – An Armenian academic has retracted a planned campaign to
apologize to Turks for the killings conducted by his countrymen after
drawing fierce criticism from the Armenian diaspora, daily Hurriyet
reported on Monday.

Dr. Armen Gavakian from the Macquarie University in Sydney, inspired
by a similar Turkish initiative apologizing to Armenians, decided
last month to launch a campaign to apologize from Turks for murders
committed by the Asala organization in the 1980s.

Gakavian retracted the campaign after fierce criticism from the
Armenian diaspora, Hurriyet wrote.

Prof. Baskin Oran, one of the academics who initiated the Turkish
apology campaign, wrote in daily Agos that they were also exposed to
similar criticism from fellow citizens.

"His campaign resembles ours. Attacks from the Workshop for
Armenian/Turkish Scholarship started immediately. They asked if it
was the Turks who made him write it," Oran wrote.

Around 200 Turkish academics, writers and journalists launched a Web
site issuing an apology to Armenians "for ignoring the tragedy that
the Armenians faced in 1915." The efforts of Turkish intellectuals have
also been criticized in Turkey and incited counter Web site campaigns,
exhibitions and photographs from studies conducted into the events.

The statement prepared by Gavakian was expected to be opened for
signature this week. "I apologize to the Ottomans and Turks for
murders committed in the name of the Armenian people and I empathize
with the feelings and pain of the Ottomans and Turks," the statement
read, according to media reports. He later denied that the statement
included an apology.

Gavakian earlier told daily Radikal that Turks’ "I apologize"
campaign inspired him to launch a similar effort. "This was a great
initiative that was proof of nobility since it is hard to face one’s
past, whether as an individual or a nation. I hope the Armenians can
show the same courage as the Turks and face the skeletons in their
own closet," he said.