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For First Time,Turkey Will Let Armenians Hold Memorial For 1915 Vict

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  • For First Time,Turkey Will Let Armenians Hold Memorial For 1915 Vict

    FOR FIRST TIME,TURKEY WILL LET ARMENIANS HOLD MEMORIAL FOR 1915 VICTIMS

    Asyrian international News agency
    April 21 2015

    By Roy Gutman
    McClatchy
    Posted 2015-04-21 02:48 GMT

    ISTANBUL -- For the first time ever, Turkey will permit Armenians to
    hold a religious service this week to commemorate the massacres and
    deportations of a century ago, Turkish officials said Monday. Turkey
    will even send a senior government official to attend.

    Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu disclosed the gesture as he issued the
    second annual statement of condolences for the deaths of "innocent
    Ottoman Armenians" in what Armenia and a score of other countries
    call a genocide.

    Officials said the government moved up the announcement of the service,
    scheduled for Friday, after the German government said it would support
    a motion in the German parliament to recognize the 1915 deportation
    and massacres as a genocide, something the United States, Britain,
    Israel and most of the rest of the world have thus far refused to do.

    Armenia will mark the centennial of the mass killings this Friday
    in Yerevan, its capital, and Armenians living in Istanbul plan an
    informal rally in the city's Taksim Square. But a religious service
    in the church of the Armenian Patriarch, with a government official
    in attendance, is not only a unique event but also another step by
    Turkey toward recognition of claims it has long denied.

    April 24, 1915, was the date the Ottoman Empire, at war and nearing
    collapse, arrested several hundred Armenian political and cultural
    figures in Istanbul and deported them to central Anatolia. That
    launched a process of arrests, deportations and mass killings that
    all but emptied the Anatolian peninsula, today's Turkey, of its
    Armenian population and left at least 1 million dead by late 1917,
    according to historical records.

    "We, the descendants of nations belonging to different ethnic and
    religious origins . . . understand what the Armenians feel," Davutoglu
    said in his statement. "We remember with respect the innocent Ottoman
    Armenians who lost their lives and offer our deep condolence to
    their descendants."

    It was both "a historical and a humane" duty for Turkey to "stand up
    for the memory of the Ottoman Armenians and the Armenian cultural
    heritage," he said. With this in mind, he added that the Armenian
    Patriarchate would hold a religious ceremony.

    Few here expect a positive response from Armenia, where officials are
    still furious that Turkey is staging a commemoration of its own on
    Friday, the centennial of the failed allied landing at Galipoli. In
    January, when Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan invited his
    Armenian counterpart to attend the Galipoli commemoration, Armenian
    President Serzh Sargsyan rejected it in an open letter to Erdogan that
    accused him of continuing Turkey's "traditional policy of denialism"
    surrounding the Armenian genocide.

    Earlier this month, Erdogan labeled as "nonsense" a statement by Pope
    Francis that called the events of 1915 "widely considered the first
    genocide of the 20th century."

    But Turkey's efforts to continue to fight the genocide label for
    the Armenia expulsion may be a losing one. The latest setback was
    Germany's decision Monday to declare the 1915 events a genocide.

    Germany had been reluctant to use the legal term, partly out of
    respect for Turkey, a major trading and NATO ally, and also because
    it has been slow to judge other countries in light of its role in
    the mass killing of Jews during World War II.

    As recently as Sunday, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier
    had rejected using the word in a television interview.

    But Germany is in a unique position to reach its own judgment on the
    1915 events in Ottoman Turkey, for the two countries were allies
    during World War I. German military and diplomatic officials were
    closely monitoring Turkey's actions against Armenians and on more
    than one occasion urged a change of policy.

    MCclatchy special correspondent Duygu Guvenc contributed from Ankara.

    http://www.aina.org/news/20150420224823.htm



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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