Skip to main content

Eurasianet

Main Menu

  • Regions
  • Topics
  • Media
  • About
  • Search
  • Newsletter
  • русский
  • Support us
X

Caucasus

Armenia
Azerbaijan
Georgia

Central Asia

Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstan
Tajikistan
Turkmenistan
Uzbekistan

Conflict Zones

Abkhazia
Nagorno Karabakh
South Ossetia

Eastern Europe

Belarus
Moldova
Russia
The Baltics
Ukraine

Eurasian Fringe

Afghanistan
China
EU
Iran
Mongolia
Turkey
United Kingdom
United States
X

Environment

Economy

Politics

Kazakhstan's Bloody January 2022
Kyrgyzstan 2020 unrest

Security

Society

American diplomats in Central Asia
Arts and Culture
Coronavirus
Student spotlight
X

Visual Stories

Podcast
Video

Blogs

Tamada Tales
The Bug Pit

Podcasts

EurasiaChat
Expert Opinions
The Central Asianist
X
You can search using keywords to narrow down the list.
Turkey

Sculptor Blasts Ankara For Demolishing Armenia Friendship Statue

Apr 27, 2011

A Eurasianet partner post from <a href="http://www.rferl.org/content/sculptor_blasts_ankara_for_demolishing_arm…;

ISTANBUL, Turkey -- A Turkish sculptor has accused the government of pandering to nationalists by dismantling his controversial statue designed to promote reconciliation with Armenia, RFE/RL's Armenian Service reports.

Mehmet Aksoy's sculpture, which stands more than 30 meters high near the Turkish-Armenian border, began to be dismantled by local authorities on April 26 following criticism in Turkey.

"I feel very bad as a sculptor because they are destroying art and the artist," Aksoy told RFE/RL in Istanbul.

"They are destroying our hope for peace together with that monument. The authorities are saying that they want peace, but that is a game. They are lying,” he said.

The sculpture depicts two figures emerging from one human form.

During a January visit to the site, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan described the monument as a "monstrosity” that overshadows a nearby Islamic shrine.

Aksoy claimed that Erdogan is simply keen to earn his Justice and Development Party (AKP) more votes in general elections due this summer.

"This looked like a message to the nationalists,” he said. "They'll now say, ‘See, Erdogan is good, he is a nationalist, let's vote for him.'”

The demolition has prompted strong criticism from some opponents of Erdogan's government and prominent Turkish artists.

One of them, Bedri Baykam, was stabbed and hospitalized last week immediately after attending a meeting that discussed actions in support of the statue.

The sculpture was commissioned at a time when Turkey and Armenia were involved in now-stalled talks aimed at overcoming a century of hostility.

Sign up for Eurasianet's free weekly newsletter. Support Eurasianet: Help keep our journalism open to all, and influenced by none.

Related

Russia's Ukraine war continues to impact Azerbaijan's oil sector
Tajiks skeptical about government earthquake plans
Azerbaijan's borders remain shut three years after pandemic began

Popular

Uzbekistan pursues dialogue with Afghanistan on fraught canal project
Deaths of Islamic figures highlight political and religious divide in Azerbaijan
Germany's Baerbock arrives in Tbilisi amid EU uncertainty
Nini Gabritchidze

Eurasianet

  • About
  • Team
  • Contribute
  • Republishing
  • Privacy Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
Eurasianet © 2023