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Armenians March On Turkish Consulate Protests Peaceful; No Arrests M

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  • Armenians March On Turkish Consulate Protests Peaceful; No Arrests M

    ARMENIANS MARCH ON TURKISH CONSULATE PROTESTS PEACEFUL; NO ARRESTS MADE

    abc7.com, CA
    April 25 2007

    LOS ANGELES, Apr. 24, 2007 - (CNS) - Thousands of people denouncing
    the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians beginning in 1915 marched in
    Hollywood and rallied at the Turkish Consulate Tuesday, blocking some
    streets but remaining generally peaceful, officials said.

    One group of protesters marched through Hollywood along Sunset
    Boulevard between Western and Normandie avenues around noon, and
    another group gathered at the Turkish Consulate at 6300 Wilshire
    Blvd. in the Miracle Mile area about 4 p.m.

    Both protests were peaceful and no arrests were made, said Officer
    Karen Smith of the Los Angeles Police Department.

    Police estimated the crowds at about 1,500, but organizers said the
    numbers were closer to 7,000 people.

    Both rallies lasted about two hours.

    Numerous people spoke in front of the consulate, and some tried to
    deliver a letter to the staff of the Turkish consulate, calling on
    the Turkish government to admit responsibility for the slaughter of
    about 1.5 million people, said Ani Gharibyan of the Armenian Youth
    Federation.

    "No one was there to accept our letters," she said. "They created
    some other holiday, something about saving the children, designed to
    avoid accepting our letter. They have done this every year."

    More Armenians live in the Hollywood and Glendale areas than in
    Yerevan, the capital of Armenia.

    April 24 is a solemn day for Armenians, marking the 92nd anniversary
    of the day orders were given to begin the first genocide of the 20th
    Century, Gharibyan said.

    "Despite overwhelming evidence, the Republic of Turkey to this day
    wages a multimillion-dollar campaign to deny the Armenian Genocide,"
    she said.

    Some speakers during the rally said the United States and other
    countries have not wanted to recognize the genocide because of Turkey's
    geopolitical importance. Many other countries, however, have urged
    Turkey to admit the guilt of the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor to
    the current Turkish Republic, in the genocide.

    In a statement, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said "the people of
    Los Angeles stand in solidarity with Armenians around the world
    in remembering the 1.5 million Armenian men, women and children
    barbarically killed by the Ottoman Empire."

    "Almost a century of history has removed the horrors of the genocide
    from our immediate collective consciousness," Villaraigosa said. "And
    yet as the assassination of Turkish-American journalist Hrant Dink
    reminded us in January, the pernicious threat of genocide denial
    still openly thrives around the world.

    "As mayor of America's preeminent Armenian community, I urge all
    Angelenos to reflect not only on the vast scale and ruthlessness of
    the genocide, but on the horror of the global silence under which it
    took place. Today, I urge Angelenos to simply never forget."
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