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90th anniversary of Armenian massacres

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  • 90th anniversary of Armenian massacres

    90th anniversary of Armenian massacres

    AP Worldstream;
    Apr 15, 2005


    Editors:

    Ninety years ago, on April 24, 1915, Ottoman Turkish authorities
    ordered the roundup of Armenian intellectuals in Constantinople, today
    known as Istanbul. It was the beginning of the expulsions and killings
    that Armenians say left 1.5 million of their people dead. Today,
    Armenians have made some headway in their demand that the world
    recognize the deaths as genocide. While some Turks have begun to
    confront this dark chapter of their history, the Turkish government
    still denies the killings were a genocide.

    Shortly, we will move three stories and a brief on the events in
    Turkey during World War I for use now or in the coming days before the
    anniversary. The stories are accompanied by an AP graphic and AP
    photos.

    The package includes:

    YEREVAN, Armenia _ At 102, Gulinia Musoyan is still horrified when she
    thinks of what happened to her as a child in Ottoman Turkey _ rousted
    from her home in the middle of the night, forced to trudge shoeless
    for days through the desert alongside thousands of others, with the
    weak killed or left to die in the blazing, rocky wastelands. Ninety
    years later, the suffering endured by Musoyan and hundreds of
    thousands of other Armenians is gaining sympathy worldwide, but not
    the judgment sought by the victims and their descendants: that the
    mass slayings of up to 1.5 million Armenians be declared a genocide
    carried out by Turkey, which the Turks vehemently deny. The killing
    began on April 24, 1915. BC-EU-FEA-GEN--Armenia-Death in Turkey. By
    Mike Eckel.

    ANKARA, Turkey _ When one of Turkey's most respected authors shattered
    a deep taboo by saying that 1 million Armenians were murdered in
    Turkey during World War I, the reaction was overwhelming. Three
    lawsuits were filed against Orhan Pamuk, and one school collected his
    books to return them. While intellectuals like Pamuk are starting to
    confront this dark chapter in history, many Turks _ and the government
    _ still deny the Armenian claim that the killings were
    genocide. BC-EU-FEA-GEN-Turkey-Confronting History. By Louis Meixler.

    ANJAR, Lebanon _ As the Ottoman Turkish army was driving Armenians
    from their homes during World War I, people from six villages along
    the Mediterranean coast fled to the Musa Dagh peak and _ with a few
    hundred rifles and provisions they dragged up the mountain _ held off
    attacks by the Turks for more than 50 days. Then some 4,000 managed to
    escape Turkish troops, and today many live in Anjar in eastern
    Lebanon, part of a worldwide Armenian diaspora that includes a former
    California governor, French singer Charles Aznavour, painter Arshile
    Gorky and singer-actress Cherylyn Sarkissian, known to the world as
    Cher. BC-FEA-ME-GEN--Lebanon-Armenian Diaspora. By Joseph Panossian.

    BC-ME-FEA-GEN--Armenian Diaspora-Helping Hand _ A list of major
    contributions to the Republic of Armenia by well-known figures in the
    Armenian diaspora.

    The AP
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