JUNE 3 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A vote by the German parliament to recognise the killings of thousands of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as a genocide has reverberated around Europe.
Turkey, predictably, was outraged and recalled its ambassador from Berlin. Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor who has come under much pressure to reduce the flow of migrants from Syria and beyond to Europe, appealed for calm. She has a vested interest, of course, as she is relying on Turkey to stem much of the migrant flow.
The decision by the German parliament to recognise the genocide, which has always been framed by Turkey as a consequence of the chaos of World War I, actually changes very little, other than affirming a major plank of Armenian foreign policy. It doesn’t change German policy towards Turkey, although it may impact the Turkish view of Germany.
What it definitely does do, though, is remind the world of the dreadful killings over 100 years ago of around 1.5m Armenians – whether you agree that this technically constitutes a genocide or not. And this is important.
ENDS
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(Editorial from Issue No. 283, published on June 3 2016)