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Armenians Commemorate 1915-18 Mass Killings

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  • Armenians Commemorate 1915-18 Mass Killings

    ARMENIANS COMMEMORATE 1915-18 MASS KILLINGS

    Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    April 24 2007

    April 24, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Armenians around the world today
    commemorated the 92nd anniversary of the start of of mass killings
    and deportations of Armenians by Ottoman Turks.

    The killings, which have been recognized by some countries as genocide,
    remain a major roadblock in relations between Armenia and Turkey.

    A leading Armenian church official, Catholicos Garegin II, led
    prayers today at a monument in the Armenian capital of Yerevan that
    memorializes the hundreds of thousands of Armenians who were killed
    from 1915 to 1918.

    Throughout the day, mourners climbed the hill to lay flowers at the
    memorial where a flame has burned since 1965 -- the 50th anniversary
    of the start of the mass killings.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian and Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian
    were among those paying tribute to the dead.

    For many Armenians -- both within the country and from its large
    diaspora -- visiting Yerevan on April 24 has become an annual ritual.

    That's the day, in 1915, that Armenia says Ottoman authorities arrested
    scores of Armenian academics and members of the intelligentsia amid
    mass killings and deportations.

    More than 20 countries -- including Russia, France, and Canada --
    have recognized the killings as genocide. Armenians say that Turks
    killed up to 1.5 millions Armenians from 1915 to 1918 as the Ottoman
    Empire was crumbling.

    Ankara maintains that the killings were part of the wider conflict
    of World War I, and that the number of Armenians who died was closer
    to 300,000.

    Yerevan Wants Recognition Of Genoicide

    It is recognition that the Armenians want -- international recognition
    for what they say was an orchestrated policy of extermination.

    Former Armenian Foreign Minister Raffi Hovannisian spoke to RFE/RL
    about the dispute today at the Yerevan monument.

    "I think we don't have to focus on and be excited by the wave of
    recognition, because the Armenian genocide and the loss of homeland
    by our people are historical facts," Hovannisian said.

    More than 20 countries, including Russia, France, and Canada, have
    passed legislation recognizing the killings as genocide.

    The genocide debate continues to negatively impact ties between
    Armenian and Turkey.

    Turkey and Armenia do not have formal diplomatic relations and
    the 268-kilometer border between the two countries has been closed
    since 1993.

    Speaking to RFE/RL today, Hrant Margarian, the leader of the
    nationalist Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutiun party,
    said relations could be improved if Turkey would recognize the killings
    as genocide:

    "No state can live while denying its past," Margarian told RFE/RL.

    "It can't live [while] denying reality. It is good for Turkey to
    recognize the Armenian genocide."

    Ankara, however, doesn't agree. Turkey has said that to establish
    diplomatic relations it would require Armenia to drop its policy of
    seeking international recognition for the killings as genocide.

    Many countries are wary of doing so, fearing it would damage their
    own relations with Turkey.

    In the United States, the Congress -- dominated by the opposition
    Democrats -- has endorsed a bill to officially recognize the Armenian
    killings as genocide.

    But despite lobbying from the United States's powerful Armenian lobby,
    the bill has met with opposition from supporters of the presidential
    administration, which is eager to maintain good ties with its NATO
    ally Turkey.

    (RFE/RL's Armenian Service contributed to this report.)
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