Haberler      English      العربية      Pусский      Kurdî      Türkçe
  En.Haberler.Com - Latest News
SEARCH IN NEWS:
  HOME PAGE 16/04/2024 20:20 
News  > 

Turkish Community Protests German Parliament's Motion On 1915 Events

25.04.2015 22:18

NGOs say parliamentary motion on ‘genocide’ claims aims at slandering Turkey, not reconciliation between Turks and Armenians.

Some 10,000 Turkish immigrants rallied in the German capital Berlin on Saturday to protest a controversial parliamentary motion that labels the events of 1915 as "genocide."



Bekir Yilmaz, director of the Turkish Community in Berlin, said the draft motion was "one-sided" and has tried to put all the blame on the Turkish side, ignoring thousands of Muslim victims during the events that took place during World War I.



"The great majority of the Turkish community members in Germany attach great importance to their history, their national and moral values," Yilmaz told The Anadolu Agency, during the rally. "We believe that it should be historians who should pass judgment on history, not politicians." 



He also called on German lawmakers to stop their controversial initiative.



Dispute on 'genocide'



During World War I, the relocation by the Ottomans of Armenians in eastern Anatolia following the revolts resulted in numerous casualties, but the term "genocide" is disputed among historians and remains a source of tension between Turkey and Armenia.



Turkey objects to the presentation of the incidents as "genocide" and describes the 1915 events as a tragedy for both sides.



The German parliament has begun last week a discussion on a motion to describe the Armenian tragedy as "genocide" to mark the 100th anniversary of the 1915 events.



German President Joachim Gauck has used the term "genocide" last week at a memorial service at the historical Berlin Cathedral on the centenary of the events.



But German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier expressed discomfort on Friday about the ongoing political debate, and said reducing the Armenian debate to the "genocide" label was not helping in reconciliation efforts between Turks and Armenians.



Alienating Turks



Yilmaz said that the politicization of the tragedies of 1915 may further alienate Germany's three-million-strong ethnic Turks, who, he said, have already felt discriminated against by growing racism and Islamophobia.



"Nobody can impose anything on us by such motions, but these can further harm integration," Yilmaz said. "Immigrants feel that they are not accepted in society, but are always blamed for something." 



Protesters rallied in central Berlin on Saturday with flags of Turkey, carrying posters reading, "Stop slandering Turkish history," "Imperialism caused pain and sorrow," "Peace at home, peace in the world."



They shouted slogans such as, "We defended our homeland, but we did not commit genocide," "Long live Turkey," and "Parliaments are not courts, lawmakers are not judges."



Protesters also carried a poster, which included the names and photos of 31 Turkish diplomats and family members, who were killed by the extremist Armenian terror organization ASALA between 1974 and 1984.



Smear campaign



Among the protesters, a 25-year-old university student told The Anadolu Agency that he views the allegations of Armenian "genocide" as a "smear campaign" against Turks.



"As the Turkish community, we would like to show our opposition to this smear campaign," he said, commenting on the controversial motion at the parliament, which labels the 1915 incidents as "genocide."



"I see these efforts as a crusade," he added.



A 56-year-old man said it should be up to historians, not politicians to decide on history.



"I have been living in Germany for 48 years," he said. "I have not seen such a big disgrace." 



He argued that Turkish immigrants should continue showing their opposition to the controversial motion at parliament in a stronger way.



"I believe that they are having such decisions, because they don't like Turks, they do not want us here. But they also cannot do without us," another female protester said.



The rally in Berlin was one of the largest for Turkish immigrants in Germany in recent years, according to organizers.



The largest union of Turkish immigrants in Germany - the Turkish-Islamic Union for Religious Affairs, the Turkish Community in Berlin, the Conservative Union of European Turkish Democrats, the Ataturk Thought Association and Berlin Alperen Ocaklari - had called on their members to join the rally.



www.aa.com.tr/en - Berlin



 
Latest News





 
 
Top News