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  • Recognizing The Genocide

    RECOGNIZING THE GENOCIDE

    Frontier Times
    19 April 2008
    Bulgaria

    Another Bulgarian city adopted a declaration recognizing Turkish
    genocide over Armenians and Bulgarians.

    April 17, in Rousse, the Municipal Council approved with 36 in favour,
    3 against and 6 abstained a special declaration wherein the town's
    governors recognize the genocide over Armenians and Bulgarians
    carried out by the Turkish state and army. Between 1903 and 1913,
    tens of thousands of Bulgarians were slaughtered by the Turkish in
    the territories that remained out of the Bulgarian state, and between
    1915 and 1918 of over 1.5 MILLION Armenians, having before that,
    in 1895/6 butchered between 100,000 and 200,000 Armenians.

    Besides the recognition of these acts of extreme violence in the
    beginning of 20th century, the declaration calls for "the Republic of
    Turkey assuming the responsibility and offer its apologies for the
    five centuries of enslaving of Bulgarians, for the crimes committed
    and mass murders perpetrated of all Bulgarians who, under the force
    of the Berlin Treaty (of 1878), remained within the boundaries of
    Turkey and to pay indemnities to the heirs of the refugees for their
    suffering and for the robbing of their properties and possessions
    that were left on its (Turkey's) territory."

    This declaration will be presented to the embassy of the Republic of
    Armenia in Sofia and also delivered to the Human Rights Commission
    in the EU Parliament. The declaration was initiated by ATAKA and VMRO
    representatives and was earlier adopted in the city of Bourgas.

    Meanwhile, the Turkish consul from Bourgas was reported to have arrived
    in Rousse and attempted in discussions with the mayor to prevent the
    adoption of such a declaration. After Bourgas approved the declaration,
    the Turkish city of Edirne, in a harsh reaction to this, terminated all
    common projects, and severed all connections between the two cities.

    Bulgaria was enslaved by the Turkish between 1396 and 1878. In the
    first century of slavery alone, the Bulgarian population was diminished
    from about 2,000,000 to just over 200,000. Mass slaughter was carried
    over Bulgarians most regularly, with some of the most brutal taking
    place in 1876 as the April Uprising was crushed, leaving some hundred
    thousand, including women and children, dead.

    The modern Turkish state has continually refused to recognize the
    terror performed over other peoples in its earlier history and has
    demonstrated especially harsh attitude to the Armenian genocide
    question.
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