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Armenians Mark Anniversary Of 1915 Genocide

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  • Armenians Mark Anniversary Of 1915 Genocide

    ARMENIANS MARK ANNIVERSARY OF 1915 GENOCIDE
    Mariam Harutunian

    AFP
    Middle East Times, Egypt
    April 24 2007

    YEREVAN -- Armenians Tuesday marked the 92nd anniversary of the killing
    of more than 1 million of their compatriots under the Ottoman Empire,
    an event recognized as genocide by many countries, but a flashpoint
    in relations between Turkey and the West.

    Amid heavy snowfall, thousands climbed to a hilltop memorial for the
    victims in the Armenian capital Yerevan.

    Flowers were laid at the foot of the memorial, where an eternal flame
    has burned since its construction in 1965, when Armenia was part of
    the Soviet Union.

    Officials including President Robert Kocharian were among those
    paying tribute.

    "The memory of this evil deed will always remain in our souls,"
    Kocharian said in a statement.

    "The international community has realized that genocide is not only
    a crime against a distinct people, but against all mankind and that
    the denial and concealment of such a crime is as dangerous as its
    preparation and execution."

    Many from Armenia's widespread diaspora descend on Yerevan every year
    for the annual ceremony.

    Among them this year was American filmmaker Karla Garapedian, whose
    recently released documentary, Screamers, examines the efforts of
    US-based rock band System of a Down to have the killings recognized
    as a genocide.

    The band's members are all grandchildren of survivors of the massacres.

    "We will speak the truth about our own history, about what happened
    to Armenians," Garapedian said. "I know that Turkey wants to join the
    EU. They have to apologize, to say: 'We made a great mistake and we
    are sorry.'"

    Hrant Gazarian, 24, arrived from Turkey and said he would lay a flower
    at the memorial this year in honor of Hrant Dink, the Turkish-Armenian
    journalist killed in Turkey in January after being branded a traitor
    by nationalists for urging an open debate on the 1915 killings.

    Eleven suspects have been charged in Dink's murder.

    "Unfortunately, this time I am laying one more flower at the eternal
    flame for Hrant Dink," Gazarian said.

    "It has already been 100 days and those behind his murder have still
    not been found and punished ... Turkey must recognize the genocide
    so that there will not be more victims like Dink."

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million died in orchestrated killings during
    the final years of the Ottoman Empire.

    Turkey strongly rejects claims of a genocide, saying that 300,000
    Armenians and at least an equal number of Turks were killed in civil
    strife during 1915 to 1917 when the Christian Armenians, backed by
    Russia, rose up against the Ottoman Empire.

    The dispute has been a major obstacle in relations between Turkey and
    Armenia, which have no diplomatic ties and whose border has remained
    closed for more than a decade.

    It has also complicated relations between EU-aspirant Turkey and
    many Western countries, especially those with large ethnic Armenian
    communities.

    More than 20 countries have officially recognized the killings as a
    genocide, including Belgium, Canada, Poland, Russia, and Switzerland.

    But many, including Britain and the United States, refuse to use the
    term to describe the events, mindful of relations with Turkey.

    In March, the Israeli parliament rejected a motion recognizing the
    killings as a genocide. Israel has close diplomatic ties with Turkey,
    one of the few Muslim countries with which it has relations.

    Turkey froze bilateral military ties with France in November after
    French lawmakers voted to make it a criminal offense to deny that
    Armenians were victims of a genocide.

    A resolution is pending in the US Congress to recognize the killings
    as a genocide, but a vote on the bill has not yet been scheduled amid
    intense lobbying against it from the White House and Turkey.

    The US ambassador to Yerevan, John Evans, was recalled last year
    after he used the term "genocide" in a speech to Armenian Americans.
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