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The Hole Investigated By Turkish Historian May Date Back To The Roma

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  • The Hole Investigated By Turkish Historian May Date Back To The Roma

    THE HOLE INVESTIGATED BY TURKISH HISTORIAN MAY DATE BACK TO THE ROMAN PERIOD, BUT THE SKELETONS IN IT - MAY NOT AT ALL: SWEDISH SCIENTIST

    ArmInfo
    2007-05-24 18:16:00

    The hole investigated by the Turkish historian may date back to the
    Roman period, but the skeletons in it may not at all, they appeared
    there much later, David Gaunt, a Swedish historian-scientist,
    told ArmInfo correspondent, commenting upon the statement of Yusuf
    Halacoglu, Chairman of the Turkish Historical Society, that the
    traces of the mass burial site discovered in Mardin province near
    the Turkish-Syrian border don't concern the tragic events of 1915.

    To remind, Yusuf Halacoglu said at a press-conference that
    anthropological expertise of soil and bones showed that the human
    remains don't belong to Armenians as it had earlier been stated. The
    Turkish historian also noted that Swedish Professor David Gaunt was
    the first to accept the offer to carry out excavation and investigate
    the burial site. Later, however, D.Gaunt refused to cooperate with
    the Turkish scientists.

    Meanwhile, D.Gaunt noted that he expressed a desire to take part in
    excavation works when he received the first data about the discovery
    of the burial site, the photos of 38 skeletons and the villagers'
    statements that the skeletons belonged to Armenians who had become
    the victims of the 1915 Genocide.

    "When I arrived at the place, I had to refuse the Turkish colleagues'
    offer since the site was completely destroyed and the remains of 38
    bodies were removed by gendarmes. There was no real evidence left at
    the place, so the object of scientific research was lacking. There was
    nothing to investigate there, roughly speaking. I didn't set myself
    a task to determine what historical period the hole dates back to,
    my task was to investigate the remains of human bodies and their
    origin, whether they were Armenians or Syrians. If the skeletons of
    people were in the hole as a result of crime, the point of the expert
    examination was to investigate the human remains, this is logical,"
    the scientist emphasized.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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