Waterloo Region Record

Kenney affirms Armenian genocide

Minister avoided Turkish-Canadian protesters gathered on the lawn

- Mike Blanchfiel­d

OTTAWA — Defence and Multicultu­ralism Minister Jason Kenney told Armenian Canadians gathered Friday on Parliament Hill that the memory of their homeland’s genocide will never be forgotten in this country.

Kenney dramatical­ly affirmed that controvers­ial position — which Canada’s NATO ally Turkey vehemently opposes — to hundreds gathered on the east section of the Hill lawn, separated by barricades from hundreds of Turkish-Canadian protesters gathered on the lawn’s west side.

In doing so, Kenney was siding with the Armenians at the start of a weekend when a pair of First World War 100th anniversar­y commemorat­ions were taking place in Armenia and Turkey.

“We are here today as proud Canadians because we believe in memory,” Kenney said. “This is why we gather on this centenary of the first genocide of the 20th century, to call prayerfull­y to mind the souls of all of those whose lives were taken in a campaign of brutal violence.”

Also Friday, Immigratio­n Minister Chris Alexander was in Armenia to lay a wreath at a commemorat­ion of the 1915 massacre, in which 1.5 million Armenians were killed at the hands of Ottoman Turks.

Ottawa calls the tragedy a genocide, to the anger of Turkey.

Kenney did not mention the Turks, nor did he visit the group of Turkish-Canadians gathered on the other side of the lawn as he spoke, many of them brandishin­g signs that denounced the use of the term “genocide.”

As he spoke, junior foreign affairs minister Lynne Yelich was leading Canada’s delegation in Turkey, including veterans of the Royal Newfoundla­nd Regiment, at ceremonies marking the centenary of the start of the Gallipoli campaign.

Armenia and Turkey both invited Gov. Gen. David Johnston, but he will instead attend a Gallipoli ceremony Saturday at the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa.

Armenian Ambassador Armen Yeganian expressed satisfacti­on that a “highlevel” Harper representa­tive will be in Armenia.

Selcuk Unal, the Turkish ambassador to Canada, had no comment on Canada’s decision to send a junior minister to Turkey.

But he did note that unlike Armenia, Turkey is fighting alongside Canada against the militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

“We believe, being a NATO ally, being an important player in our neighbourh­ood and actually taking part in the same coalition against Daesh and ISIL, things could have been different,” Unal said.

Kenney also connected history to the violence in Syria and Iraq, saying: “As we speak, Daesh — the so-called Islamic State — is attempting to affect a genocide against the Assyrians, Yazidis and Christians of Iraq and Syria.”

The Armenian issue still echoes across the world. On Thursday, Germany changed its long-standing position and described the massacre as genocide. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the accusation­s against his country are groundless.

The Conservati­ves have courted votes from various diaspora groups, including the relatively large number of Canadians of Ukrainian and Tamil descent.

Yeganian said that the Tories’ recognitio­n of the Armenian genocide doesn’t necessaril­y translate into votes.

“I don’t think because of that the Armenian community is pro-Conservati­ve,” he said, estimating the split as “roughly half and half ” with the Liberals.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Members of the Armenian community and human rights activists gather on Parliament Hill to commemorat­e the centennial of the Armenian Genocide on Friday.
JUSTIN TANG, THE CANADIAN PRESS Members of the Armenian community and human rights activists gather on Parliament Hill to commemorat­e the centennial of the Armenian Genocide on Friday.

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