Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Genocide: An Inconvenient Truth

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

  • Genocide: An Inconvenient Truth

    GENOCIDE: AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH
    By Gary Kamiya

    Salon
    Oct 16 2007

    The Armenian genocide bill has been attacked by both the right and
    the left -- and it may make matters worse. But it's necessary.

    President Bush urges Congress to reject a bill on Armenian genocide
    Oct. 10, 2007.

    It was the first holocaust, one of the worst crimes of the 20th
    century. In 1915, during World War I, the ruling political party
    under the Ottoman regime ordered the extermination of its Armenian
    subjects. At least 800,000 and as many as 1.5 million men, women and
    children were murdered or died of disease, starvation and exposure.

    The details of the genocide, as laid out in books like Robert Fisk's
    "The Great War for Civilization" and Peter Balakian's "The Burning
    Tigris," are harrowing. Lines of men, women and children were roped
    together by the edge of a river, so that shooting the first person
    caused all the rest to drown. Women were routinely raped, killed
    and genitally mutilated. Some were crucified. Children were taken on
    boats into rivers and thrown off.

    The genocide was not carried out by the Republic of Turkey, which
    did not exist yet, but by the ruling party in the final years of the
    collapsing Ottoman regime. To this day the Turkish government has never
    acknowledged that what transpired was a monstrous and intentional
    crime against humanity. Instead, it claims that the Armenians were
    simply unfortunate victims of a chaotic civil war, that only 300,000
    to 600,000 died, that Turks actually died in greater numbers, and
    that the Armenians brought their fate on themselves by collaborating
    with the Russians.

    http://www.salon.com/opinion/kamiya/200 7/10/16/armenian_genocide/index_np.html
Working...
X