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Estonian-Armenian society wants Turkey to regret Genocide

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  • Estonian-Armenian society wants Turkey to regret Genocide

    ESTONIAN-ARMENIAN SOCIETY WANTS TURKEY TO REGRET GENOCIDE

    Baltic News Service
    April 18, 2005

    TALLINN, Apr 18 -- The Estonian-Armenian Society has adopted an address
    to the Estonian parliament in connection with the 90th anniversary
    of the Turkish genocide against Armenians, asking that Turkey should
    regret the mass murder of Armenians in 1915.

    The address states that the history of sufferings of the Armenian
    people continued and culminated in 1915 in a horrendous genocide of
    particularly gruesome details.

    The address underlines that there can be no double morals in attitudes
    to crime and that crimes committed by winners of wars are crimes
    against humanity, too. Peoples learn to live in peace only when
    classification of crimes into bad and good ones stops and when they
    are made public independent of who committed them, the address goes
    on to say.

    "Also Turkey that is aspiring to become a member in the European Union
    must be guided by it, the address states. "Admission of former guilt
    and regret should be the first steps on that road."

    The address drawn up by member of the Society Einar Laigna was
    Monday read out in parliament by Toivo Tootsen, chairman of the
    Estonian-Armenian parliamentary group.

    Regular annihilation of Armenians broke out in the Ottoman Empire
    at the beginning of the previous century and acquired the dimensions
    of genocide.

    The violence climaxed in 1915 when more than a million Armenians were
    killed in a few months. That day is marked as the day of remembrance
    of genocide victims in Armenia. April 24 is the state Remembrance
    Day in Armenia.

    Until today, Turkey refuses to admit the genocide of Armenians.

    Members of the Armenian genocide during the Ottoman Empire will be
    remembered in Tallinn on April 24.

    Priest of the Armenian church in Tallinn Father Garnik told BNS that
    the remembrance ceremony would start at noon on April 24 and would be
    followed by the laying of flowers at a memorial stone in Tartu Maantee.

    There will be a concert of remembrance songs later that evening in
    Tallinn's Niguliste Church.
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