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New Document On The Turkish Anti-Armenian Policy In 1934

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  • New Document On The Turkish Anti-Armenian Policy In 1934

    NEW DOCUMENT ON THE TURKISH ANTI-ARMENIAN POLICY IN 1934

    armradio.am
    04.11.2008 16:17

    The US Department of State recently discovered a document proving
    that over 1934 the Turkish government continued its genocide policy
    towards the Armenian population.

    In a letter sent from the US Embassy in Ankara, Ambassador Robert
    P. Skinner summarizes the way in which the Turkish government
    constrained the remaining Armenians living in Anatolia, to give up
    their properties before being exiled from their hearths, independent
    correspondent Jean Eckian informed.

    Robert P. Skinner indicates that: "It is probable, that their expulsion
    is quite simply a step moreover of the Turkish government in its
    policy stated to make of Anatolia a space purely inhabited by Turks."

    Moreover, the dating of this letter shows that the crime committed
    against the Armenians is not something which can simply be relegated
    to the Ottoman time.

    The full text of Ambassador Robert P. Skinner's letter, dated March 2,
    1934, is presented below:

    "I have the honor to bring to the Department's attention such details
    as have reached the Embassy from several sources concerning the recent
    deportations of Armenians from the interior of Anatolia to Istanbul.

    The deportees began to arrive at Istanbul some six weeks ago and
    they are quartered by the Armenian Church and its auxiliary relief
    organizations in Churches, school houses and abandoned buildings in
    the villages of Oteköy and Yeniköy. About 600 Armenians are now being
    taken care of. They are from various towns and villages of Anatolia.

    It is assumed by most of the deportees that their expulsion from
    their homes in Anatolia is a part of the Government's program of
    making Anatolia a pure Turkish district.

    They relate that the Turkish police, in towns and villages where
    Armenians lived, attempted to instigate local Moslem people to drive
    the Armenians away. These efforts failed completely. The authorities
    then brought in Turks from Rumeli and intimated to them that they
    could take over the Armenian possessions. This new element, however,
    instead of taking a hostile attitude toward the Armenians became
    most congenial with them. These two means failing, the Armenians
    were told that they had to leave at once for Istanbul. They sold
    their possessions receiving for them ruinous price. I have been told
    that cattle worth several hundred liras a head had been sold for as
    little as five liras a head. My informant stated that the Armenians
    were permitted to sell their property in order that no one of them
    could say that they were forced to abandon it. However, the sale
    under these conditions amounted to a practical abandonment.

    The Armenians were obliged to walk from their villages to the
    railways and then they were shipped by train to Istanbul. Local relief
    organizations are doing their best to attempt to find employment is
    found. However, the size of the task is staggering. Local sympathetic
    people have been canvassed to contribute money for their relief.

    The real reasons for the deportations are unknown. A few Armenians
    believe that it is due to their superior business methods which
    arouses jealousy among certain Turkish elements. The Armenians are
    know for their energy and thoroughness in business and many of them
    believe that they suffering now for these qualities. It is likely,
    though, that their removal is simply one step in the government's
    avowed policy of making Anatolia purely Turkish."

    --Boundary_(ID_ZvBRFbdCzqCcyRnPVc2 dHQ)--
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