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U.S. Congressional Panel Recognize As Genocide 1915 Massacre Of Arme

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  • U.S. Congressional Panel Recognize As Genocide 1915 Massacre Of Arme

    U.S. CONGRESSIONAL PANEL RECOGNIZE AS GENOCIDE 1915 MASSACRE OF ARMENIANS BY OTTOMAN TURKS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    19.03.2010 14:15 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ A U.S. congressional panel has described as Genocide
    the 1915 killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks. The non-binding
    resolution in the House Foreign Affairs Committee recommends that
    President Barak Obama recognize the 1915 killings of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks as Genocide. The measure was passed by a narrow 23 to
    22 vote with one member not participating.

    Historians agree Armenians were massacred by the Ottoman Empire -
    what was to become Turkey - during World War I. But not all agree
    that it was genocide, VOA News reported.

    Ronald Suny, an expert on Armenia with the University of Chicago,
    defines genocide. "The definition of genocide that is most often used
    is the official U.N. definition in the Genocide Convention of the late
    1940s. And that definition argues that a genocide is the intentional
    killing of all or part of a designated people defined by their faith,
    their race, their ethnicity or their nationality," he said.

    Suny explains that during the First World War, the Ottoman Empire
    sided with Germany and was thus at war with Russia and most of Europe.

    "When the Ottomans were defeated at a major battle in the winter of
    1914-15, the government saw the Armenians, who were on both sides
    of the Russian-Turkish frontier, as a potential 'fifth column' -
    a danger, an internal danger to their empire," he said.

    "And they then carried out systematically, deportations of Armenians
    from eastern Anatolia, first demobilizing the Armenian soldiers who
    were serving with the Ottoman army, forcing them to dig their graves
    and shooting them. And then women and children, deporting them into
    the deserts of Syria, massacring them along the way and ultimately
    killing thousands and thousands when they reached Dayr az Zawr,
    the end point in the Syrian desert," he added.

    Suny says the case is clear - the action by the Ottoman Turks was
    genocide. "There is no doubt that there was, in fact, a state
    organized, systematic deportation and massacre of a designated
    population, defined by their religion and ethnicity, namely the
    Armenians," he said.

    "And that it was carried out, initiated and organized by this
    government. So if you have a mass killing of an ethno-religious group,
    carried out by a government in order to eliminate those people from
    their homeland, or to destroy their political and cultural potential -
    that is, by the conventional definition and most scholarly definitions,
    a genocide," he continued.

    The majority of scholars and historians agree with Ronald Suny. But
    Guenter Lewy from the University of Massachusetts does not. "I don't
    think there was any intent to exterminate the Armenian community.

    There was an intent to remove them and neutralize them as a fifth
    column," he said. Experts also disagree on the number of Armenians
    killed by the Ottoman Turks. Guenter Lewy says close to 700,000
    perished.

    But most scholars - such as Roger Smith with the College of William and
    Mary - say the figure is higher. "Out of about two million Armenians
    that were thought to exist in 1915, probably about a million and a half
    - at least over a million - perished and others were dispersed. So
    that if you say in 1915 there were two million Armenians in what
    we call Turkey, but the Ottoman Empire - there are now about 60,000
    Armenians in Turkey. So a huge, vast population change," he said.
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