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Genocide issue troubles Armenia-Turkey rapprochement

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  • Genocide issue troubles Armenia-Turkey rapprochement

    EuroNews - English
    April 25, 2009 Saturday


    Genocide issue troubles Armenia-Turkey rapprochement


    Armenia and Turkey may be approaching an understanding on their
    troubled shared history, but memories of mass-killings still loom
    large over relations between the two countries.

    In a day of remembrance Armenia has been honouring the victims of what
    it says was genocide by Ottoman Turks in World War One.

    Turkey denies that as many as 1.5 million Armenians died and says that
    the mass-killings were part of a wider conflict that claimed the lives
    of many Turks as well.

    It has been the biggest source of hostility between the two countries
    for nearly a century. However, in an historic agreement on the eve of
    today's commemoration, both agreed on a road map to normalise ties. It
    is a first step along what is expected to be a long path to
    reconciliation.

    "I welcome the fact that our countries are moving closer," one student
    said. "But it's unacceptable that our leaders can forget the genocide
    and forget what the Turks have done to our great-grandfathers. I can't
    understand how they can sign an accord and forget the genocide."

    Diplomatic sources say that the road map has yet to be signed, but add
    that it sets a timeframe for the establishment of relations and the
    opening of borders. It also plans for a special historical commission
    to consider Armenia's genocide claims.

    But the issue is also complicated by Turkey's relations with
    Azerbaijan, which Ankara supported when Armenian-backed separatists in
    Nagorno-Karabakh broke away 1993. An Azeri backlash could derail the
    Armenia deal.
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