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US Embassy almanac labels killings of Armenians in 1915 as genocide

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  • US Embassy almanac labels killings of Armenians in 1915 as genocide

    US Embassy almanac labels the killings of Armenians in 1915 as genocide

    ArmRadio.am
    19.03.2007 13:02

    While debates continue in the US over a resolution presented to
    Congress on the Armenian Genocide, an almanac distributed by the US
    Embassy in Ankara lists Turkey as a country that has committed
    genocide, Turkish "Today's Zaman" wrote, French journalist Jean Eckian
    informs.

    "The World Almanac and Book of Facts" was first published in 1868 by
    the New York World newspaper and has long been distributed by the US
    Embassy in Ankara. However this year's version contains a reference to
    the early 20th century killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as
    "genocide," a label Turkey vehemently denies. The most recent version
    of the annual almanac, which covers important events in US and world
    history, mentioned Turkey in the "Crime and Terrorist activities;
    Genocide" section.

    The almanac noted that the term "genocide" was first used by
    Dr. Raphael Lemkin in 1944 and asserts that the definition of the
    world contained the practices of "members of a group being killed,
    serious bodily injuries to members of a group, prevention of births
    and children being removed from the group."

    The almanac continued with the following statements: "The year: 1915,
    the event: Armenians being destroyed by Young Turks, the location:
    Turkey, the Ottoman Empire, estimated deaths: some 1 million."

    Other examples of genocide listed in the 2007 World Almanac of Books
    and Facts were the events that occurred in Ukraine in the 1930s, the
    experiences of Jews at the hands of Nazi Germany from 1933-1945, the
    activities of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia from 1975-1979, the murder
    of Iraqi Kurds in 1988, the experience of Bosnians from 1992-1995, the
    events that took place in Rwanda in 1994 and the events in Sudan's
    Darfur region ongoing since 2003.
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