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Armenia remembers 1915 killings

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  • Armenia remembers 1915 killings

    Armenia remembers 1915 killings

    Sunday, 24 April, 2005, 04:02 GMT 05:02 UK

    By Natalia Antelava
    BBC News, Yerevan

    Armenia want Turkey to admit the mass killings amounted to genocide


    Armenia is marking the 90th anniversary of the mass deportations and
    killings of hundreds of thousands of their people by the Ottoman
    empire. Thousands of young people marched through the streets of
    Yerevan on Saturday night.

    They sang the national anthem as the torchlit procession moved slowly
    up the hill towards a memorial to the victims.

    Many said they were going to spend the night at the memorial and then
    join a procession on Sunday.

    Hundreds of thousands are expected to join the remembrance march.

    Among them will be many Armenians from the United States and Europe,
    members of the country's huge diaspora which is at least three times
    as big as Armenia's current population of three million.

    Turkey's position

    Many people said they hoped to see a million and a half Armenians come
    out into the streets on Sunday - as many as are believed to have died
    during the two-year period of killings and deportations by Ottoman
    Turkey that began in 1915.

    Ninety years later, Armenia is still haunted by this past.

    Its borders with Turkey are sealed and there are no diplomatic
    relations between the two countries.

    The people of Armenia want Turkey and the world to recognise what
    happened in 1915 was genocide.

    But Ankara says the number of those killed is grossly inflated and
    that Armenians were casualties of WWI and not victims of genocide.

    As Ankara prepares to start EU membership talks in October, the
    government in Yerevan hopes that Europe will push Turkey to change its
    stance: and this will be one of the demands of those who will take to
    the streets of Yerevan on Sunday.

    Many here say they will come out not just to commemorate those who
    died, but also to demand that the world recognise what everyone here
    believes was the first genocide of the 20th century.
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