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BEIRUT: Armenians Remember Victims Of 1915 Massacre

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  • BEIRUT: Armenians Remember Victims Of 1915 Massacre

    ARMENIANS REMEMBER VICTIMS OF 1915 MASSACRE
    By Rym Ghazal
    Daily Star staff

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    April 25, 2006

    Turkey still denies targeting minority community

    BEIRUT: Thousands of Armenians from all over Lebanon gathered at Bourj
    Hammoud Stadium on Monday to commemorate the 91st anniversary of the
    Armenian genocide, demanding that Turkey "recognize and apologize for"
    the massacre committed by the Ottoman Turks in 1915.

    "It was the first massacre of the 20th century to which the whole world
    turned a blind eye," former Minister Alain Tabourian told the crowd.

    The gathering was attended by 35,000 Armenians who came wearing the
    Armenian flag but singing the national Lebanese anthem as they marched
    into the stadium in the Armenian suburb of Beirut.

    "Turkey tried to wipe us out of existence, but we survived and were
    reborn with new citizenships," said Tabourian, who also thanked
    Lebanon for having welcomed Armenian refugees who fled Turkey. "We
    never forgot our roots."

    He also thanked representatives from the government and President
    Emile Lahoud, along with Lebanese Forces MP Strida Geagea, who attended
    the commemoration ceremony.

    Beginning on April 24, 1915, Armenians say about 1.5 million Armenians
    "were massacred" by the Ottoman Turks as part of a government-led
    "genocide," a term Turkey has fiercely and consistently rejected for
    decades. Ankara also says the dead numbered 300,000-500,000.

    Survivors fled to Syria and Lebanon, with the latter now home to the
    largest Armenian community in the Arab world, made up of about 75,000
    descendants of those who fled the 1915-1917 violence.

    "In order for the Armenians to open a new page with Turkey, it has
    to acknowledge and admit its crime against us, and apologize for
    committing the highest kind of atrocities possible against human
    beings," Tabourian said.

    http://www.dailystar.com.lb

    "Their admission of this crime would benefit them and help them
    accomplish their dream of entering the European Union, and would give
    us our peace and compensation which are rightfully ours," he added,
    referring to EU demands that Turkey face its past and expand freedom
    of speech before it can qualify to enter the union.

    Apart from the speeches, which were mainly delivered in Armenian, white
    balloons were released in honor of those killed in the bloodletting
    and in hope that peace can finally be realized between Turkey and
    the Armenians.

    "It is rather unlikely they Turkey will admit it, but we have to
    prove that as Armenians, we still exist, and just as Palestinians are
    fighting for their land, so are we," said one participant at the event,
    Anto Narguizian, 17.

    "Turkey's alliance with the United States is very strategic, both
    economically and geographically, so the United States will not agree
    that such a mass genocide occurred, even if most European states
    have agreed to this," he added. "But if America does not agree,
    Turkey will not return the land it has taken from the Armenians,
    and will not repay all the damages it has caused."

    Narguizian's mother, Maral, who did not attend the commemoration,
    told The Daily Star: "Everyone has their way of expressing their
    beliefs and what they stand for; I would rather express myself through
    monetary aid to local charities and churches."

    But she added that these "protests need to be done, to ask for our
    rights, which have long been ignored."
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