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Armenia's president renews call for Turkey to admit to 'genocide'

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  • Armenia's president renews call for Turkey to admit to 'genocide'

    Armenia's president renews call for Turkey to admit to 'genocide'

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 20, 2005 Wednesday 8:57 AM GMT

    YEREVAN April 20 -- Armenia's President Robert Kocharian on Wednesday
    renewed calls for Turkey to face up to its past and admit that it
    committed genocide against Armenians as the republic prepares to mark
    the 90th anniversary of the massacres.

    "It is hard for us to understand the position of the Turkish side which
    is expressed not only by a denial of the past but with a continuing
    blockade of Armenia," Kocharian said in an address to a conference
    on genocide prevention.

    Armenian will mark on Sunday mass killings by Ottoman Turks,
    a slaughter that is among the most painful episodes of Armenia's
    ages-old history and that continues to impede modern relations between
    Armenia and Turkey.

    Ankara recognized Armenia's independence when it broke away from the
    Soviet Union in 1991 but has refused to establish diplomatic relations
    with Yerevan because of Armenian efforts to secure international
    condemnation of the World War I-era massacres as genocide.

    In 1993, Turkey shut its border with Armenia in a show of solidarity
    with its close ally Azerbaijan, which was at war with Armenia over
    the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, dealing a heavy economic blow to the
    impoverished nation.

    Armenia has planned a series of events, including conferences,
    exhibits, film screenings and a massive march, with which it hopes to
    draw international attention to its cause and put pressure on Turkey.

    "Recognizing the genocide is important to prevent genocide in the
    future ... it would be the answer to many of the problems that exist
    between our two peoples and a possibility to look into the future,"
    Kocharian said.

    Kocharian opened with a conciliatory remark saying, "we remember the
    past with pain but without hate."

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen perished in
    orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire,
    the predecessor of modern Turkey, was falling apart.

    Ankara counters that 300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were
    killed in "civil strife" during World War I when the Armenians rose
    against their Ottoman rulers and sided with invading Russian troops.
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