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Armenia marks genocide remembrance day

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  • Armenia marks genocide remembrance day

    Agence France Presse
    April 24, 2004 Saturday

    Armenia marks genocide remembrance day

    YEREVAN

    Armenians laid flowers on a hill in their capital Yerevan on Saturday
    to mark the World War I genocide in which they say up to 1.5 million
    of their forebears were massacred by the Ottoman Empire.

    Thousands of people, some representing the large Armenian diaspora
    outside this nation of three million, climbed to the memorial to the
    genocide victims on top of Yerevan's Tsitsernakaberd hill throughout
    the day.

    Radio and television played somber music and played documentaries of
    the genocide.

    Seventy-year-old Pogos, whose father survived the attacks, planned to
    climb to the memorial in the evening with his grandsons.

    "My father... told us thousands of times how in the morning armed
    Turks came into the village and began to burn houses, kill men, women
    and children and, not allowing people to take food or water, began to
    herd them toward the desert," he said.

    Pogos's father spent the rest of his life searching in vain for his
    mother, whom he lost during the forced resettlements.

    "He was saved by some Kurds who bought him for a few gold coins and
    sent him off to Syria," Pogos said.

    Some 20,000 survivors of the genocide remain worldwide, 900 of them
    in Armenia, Lavrenti Barsegyan, director of a genocide museum in
    Yerevan.

    "Each year there are less and less eye witnesses... and less and less
    people can tell of the evil deeds of the Turks," he said.

    The massacres of Armenians during World War I is one of the most
    painful episodes in Turkish history.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen were massacred in
    orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

    Turkey categorically rejects claims of genocide and says that some
    300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were killed in civil strife
    during World War I when the Armenians rose up against their Ottoman
    rulers.
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