Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Armenians Stage Demonstrations On April 24 Anniversary

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Armenians Stage Demonstrations On April 24 Anniversary

    ARMENIANS STAGE DEMONSTRATIONS ON APRIL 24 ANNIVERSARY

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    April 25 2007

    Tens of thousands of Armenians on Tuesday marked the 92nd anniversary
    of killings of Anatolian Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, an event
    they label as genocide, reiterating their call on Ankara as well as
    the world to recognize the killings as genocide.

    "We came here to pay tribute to the victims so that our neighbors
    wouldn't for a minute think that we could forget about this, so that
    this won't happen in the future," said acting Defense Minister Michael
    Arutyunian. Top officials, including President Robert Kocharian,
    were among those paying tribute.

    While Armenian television stations in the past used images from Mt.
    Ararat in Turkey during anniversary broadcasts, this year they used
    images of an Armenian church on Akdamar Island in Lake Van that was
    reopened earlier this year as a museum. Banners reading "1,500,000+1,"
    were also shown in images in an apparent reference to the murder
    of prominent Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink. Dink was killed
    by a Turkish nationalist gunman outside the Ýstanbul office of his
    bilingual newspaper, Agos, in late January. His funeral drew 100,000
    mourners including government officials who condemned the killing.

    In neighboring Iran, authorities blocked a traditional march by
    ethnic Armenians on the anniversary of the alleged genocide. A group
    of Iranian Armenians gathered in the garden of an Armenian church in
    Tehran, first attending a service there, and then laid flowers at a
    genocide monument in the garden of the church. The group dispersed
    without a march to a historic church located near the Turkish Embassy
    in Tehran. It was not clear why Iran refused to allow the march, which
    has previously been a traditional part of the April 24 demonstrations
    in Tehran.

    In Moscow, a group of 200 ethnic Armenians threw Molotov cocktails
    in the garden of the Turkish Embassy building. The group also tore up
    Turkish flags and posters of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the
    modern Turkish Republic. Russian police officers avoided interfering
    in the protest while some demonstrators waved flags of the outlawed
    Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and held aloft posters of now-jailed
    PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan. Some protestors also waved Greek Cypriot
    flags, an administration that is not officially recognized by Ankara.

    --Boundary_(ID_e/il3qyz6TZIYw31/t4E+Q)--
Working...
X