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Germany angers Turkey with Armenian genocide resolution

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Turkey’s prime minister condemned a vote by German lawmakers on Thursday expected to label the 1915 massacre of Armenians by Ottoman forces a “genocide” which risks Ankara’s wrath just as Berlin needs its help to tackle the migrant crisis.

Turkey rejects the idea that the killings of Christian Armenians during World War One amounted to a genocide and has warned German Chancellor Angela Merkel that the Bundestag vote would damage bilateral ties.

The timing could not be worse for Merkel, who has championed a deal with Turkey under which Ankara has agreed to stem the flow of refugees to Europe in return for cash, visa-free travel rights and accelerated talks on European Union membership.

Merkel is powerless to stop the symbolic resolution, which was initiated by the opposition Greens and is also backed by lawmakers in her conservative bloc and the Social Democrats.

In a sign of the sensitivities, Merkel will not take part in the vote due to public appointments, although she did back it in an internal party straw poll this week. Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel, both Social Democrats, will also be absent.

Berlin has already had a taste of the expected backlash from Ankara. Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said lawmakers’ approval would be “irrational” and that the vote would be a test of friendship between the allies.

Yildirim said he had personally urged Merkel to work against the vote and that she had promised to do all she could.

“We wish Germany would not allow such an irrational issue,” Yildirim told ruling party members in comments broadcast live, adding the vote “was a real test of Germany’s friendship”.

Berlin has already had a taste of the expected backlash from Ankara.

“We wish Germany would not allow such an irrational issue,” Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim told ruling party members on Thursday, hours before the vote.

On Wednesday he described the vote as “ridiculous”. “It was an ordinary event that occurred during wartime conditions in 1915,” he said at a news conference.

The nature and scale of the killings remain highly contentious. Turkey accepts that many Armenians died in partisan fighting beginning in 1915, but denies that up to 1.5 million were killed and that this constituted an act of genocide, a term used by many Western historians and foreign parliaments.

MIGRANT DEAL THREAT?

German officials hope the vote will not scupper the EU-Turkey migrant deal, which has been under a cloud since Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan pushed out his prime minister last month and began questioning parts of the agreement.

They say Erdogan has a strong interest in making the migrants deal work and will not allow this to get in the way.

Addressing parliament before the votes, several lawmakers stressed they did not want to point a finger at the current Turkish government but rather wanted to bolster reconciliation efforts between Turkey and Armenia.

“We know from our own experience how difficult and painful it is to work through the past … but only in this way can human trust and strength grow,” said Social Democrat Rolf Muetzenich.

Armenia welcomed the resolution. The foreign ministry said Turkish authorities “are continuing to obstinately reject the undeniable fact of genocide”.

The resolution could also raise tensions with Germany’s roughly 3.5 million-strong Turkish community. Over a thousand Turks demonstrated against the resolution on Saturday in front of the Reichstag building in Berlin.

“I don’t think this is the right step,” said Murat Kayman of Germany’s DITIB Turkish-Islamic group before the vote. He said a European “blind spot” could explains the vehemence of the Turkish reaction to the accusation of genocide.

The resolution says the Armenians’ fate exemplified “the history of mass exterminations, ethnic cleansing, deportations and yes, genocide, which marked the 20th century in such a terrible way.”

It also acknowledges that the German Empire, then a military ally of the Ottomans, did nothing to stop the killings.

“That we were complicit in this terrible crime does not mean that today we will be complicit in denying it,” said opposition Greens co-leader Cem Oezdemir.

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