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Thousands Mark Genocide Day In Armenia And Worldwide

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  • Thousands Mark Genocide Day In Armenia And Worldwide

    THOUSANDS MARK GENOCIDE DAY IN ARMENIA AND WORLDWIDE
    Lilit Gevorgyan

    Global Insight
    April 25, 2012

    Millions of Armenians in Armenia and across worldwide Diaspora have
    been holding a week of rallies and vigils culminating in marking
    the Genocide Day on 24 April in memory of killings of Armenians by
    Ottoman Turks during the First World War. The Armenian government
    and diplomatic dignitaries were among thousands who attended the
    Genocide Monument in the Armenian capital yesterday (24 April). The
    mass killings and deportations took place between 1915 and 1923,
    and resulted in one of the first genocides in the 20th century as
    claimed by Armenia. 24 April is when 300 Armenian intellectuals along
    with 5,000 members of Istanbul's Armenian community were rounded up
    and killed as the wider-ranging persecutions started.

    The killings were recognised as crimes against humanity by a court
    martial set up by Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey, in early
    1923, who personally accused the Ottoman government of carrying out
    the atrocities. However, Turkey has increasingly grown determined to
    shake off any accusations of crimes against humanity which in 1948
    were described as genocide by the UN Convention on Prevention of
    Genocide following killings of European Jews during the Second World
    War. Turkey argues that the number of killed were not over 1.5 million
    as Armenia maintains but 800,000 and they were result of a civil war.

    The UN, European Parliament and over 20 countries have recognised the
    killings as genocide but one key opponent of the recognition is the
    US. The US Congress regularly tables motion on the issue, and this
    year is no exception, but these do not normally receive backing from
    the majority as such endorsement could affect relations with Turkey.

    In recent years Turkish intellectuals and human rights activists have
    also been staging protests in Turkey demanding freedom of speech and
    more openness on this issue. This is despite the risk of prosecution
    as in a number of cases Turkish intellectuals have been charged with
    "insulting Turkishness" under Article 301 of the Criminal Code for
    using the term crimes against humanity regarding the Armenian killings.

    Significance:Genocide Day is a uniquely unifying event for Armenians in
    Armenia and abroad. The issue is highly sensitive and emotive not least
    because Armenia and Turkey are very far from the healing process. The
    arguments that this is a matter of history are clearly irrelevant until
    truth and reconciliation takes place. Furthermore, the fact that simply
    talking about this historic event can be prosecuted and even results in
    death (as seen in the case of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink,
    shot dead in 2007 by a Turkish nationalist) highlights once again that
    the issue of the killings is nothing but historic. It is an issue that
    breeds mistrust between Armenian and Turkish communities. Any efforts
    to bypass it have proven ineffective as failed 2010 Armenian-Turkish
    protocols on normalisation of relations showed.


    From: Baghdasarian
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