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Armenian 'genocide': disputed massacres of 1915-17

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  • Armenian 'genocide': disputed massacres of 1915-17

    Agence France Presse
    March 5, 2010 Friday 1:00 PM GMT

    Armenian 'genocide': disputed massacres of 1915-17

    ANKARA, March 5 2010


    Armenia and Turkey are at odds over whether the massacres and
    deporations of Armenians between 1915 and 1917 by their Ottoman rulers
    should be described as "genocide", as recognised by France, Canada and
    the European Parliament.

    On Friday Turkey reacted with fury to a US Congress panel's resolution
    calling the massacre "genocide" warning of damage to US ties and
    efforts to reconcile with Armenia.

    Armenia says the massacres and deportations left more than 1.5 million
    of its people dead, while Turkey puts the number from 250,000 to
    500,000.

    Clashes with the Turks had already started at the end of the 19th
    century as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart, claiming 200,000
    lives between 1894 and 1909, according to Armenian sources.

    Then, in October 1914, the Ottoman Empire entered World War I, at the
    side of Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

    On April 24, 1915, thousands of Armenians suspected of having
    nationalist sentiments hostile to the central Ottoman government were
    rounded up. On May 26, a special law authorised deportations "for
    reasons of internal security".

    The Armenian population of Anatolia and Cilicia, called by the Ottoman
    Empire "the enemy within", was forced into exile in the Mesopotamian
    desert with a large number of Armenians killed on the way or in the
    camps.

    The Ottoman Empire was dismantled in 1920, two years after the
    creation of an independent Armenian state in May 1918.

    Turkey accepts today that massacres were carried out and that many
    Armenians were killed while being deported, but describes the
    bloodshed as civil strife.

    It says the Armenians collaborated with the Russian enemy during World
    War I, and that tens of thousands of Turks were killed at their hands.

    The European Parliament recognised the killings as genocide on June 18, 1987.

    France in 2001 became the first large European state to follow suit
    through a law stating that "France publicly recognises the 1915
    Armenian genocide", without stating that the Turks were responsible.

    Today 3.2 million Armenians live in Armenia, while a diaspora of more
    than four million Armenians has settled mainly in Russia, the Middle
    East, Canada, the United States and France.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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