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Armenian leader condemns 'genocide' before Pope

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  • Armenian leader condemns 'genocide' before Pope

    Christian Today, UK
    May 8 2008



    Armenian leader condemns 'genocide' before Pope


    Posted: Thursday, May 8, 2008, 10:11 (BST)


    Armenia's Orthodox leader on Wednesday used the pulpit of the Vatican
    to condemn the 1915 killing of 1.5 million ethnic Armenians by Ottoman
    Turks, saying the whole world should recognise it as a genocide.


    "We Armenians are a people who have survived genocide, and we know
    well the value of love, brotherhood, friendship and a secure life,"
    Karekin II said in a public address during Pope Benedict's general
    audience in St Peter's Square.


    "Today, many countries of the world recognise and condemn the genocide
    committed against the Armenian people by Ottoman Turkey..." the head
    of Armenia's Apostolic Church added, speaking in English before tens
    of thousands of people.


    Karekin, who like the pope has the title "His Holiness," said he
    wanted to "appeal to all nations and lands to universally condemn all
    genocides that have occurred throughout history and those that
    continue to the present day..."


    Turkey strongly denies Armenian claims, saying that Muslim Turks also
    died in inter-ethnic conflict as the Ottoman Empire crumbled during
    World War One.


    Western historians have backed Armenian claims that the killings
    amounted to a genocide.


    In his address to Karekin before the crowd, Pope Benedict spoke of
    "the severe persecutions suffered by Armenian Christians, especially
    during the last century", but did not use the word genocide.


    Karekin, in his address broadcast live on many religious television
    stations around the world, said "the denial of these crimes is an
    injustice that equals the commission of the same".


    France's lower house of parliament infuriated Turkey in 2006 by
    backing a bill that would make it a crime to deny that mass killings
    of Armenians amounted to genocide. France's Senate never ratified the
    bill.


    Last year legislators in the US House of Representatives proposed a
    resolution to formally name the massacre a genocide but the move
    faltered under stiff opposition by President George W Bush and Turkey,
    a key NATO ally.


    The word "genocide" appeared in a joint statement when Karekin visited
    the late Pope John Paul in 2000. But the Vatican, which has diplomatic
    relations with both Armenia and Turkey, has never formally recognised
    the killings as such.


    John Paul visited Armenia in 2001 and prayed at a monument to the dead
    in the capital, Yerevan.
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