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Tehran: Iran allows ethnic Armenians to mark alleged genocide

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  • Tehran: Iran allows ethnic Armenians to mark alleged genocide

    IRNA< Iran
    April 23 2005

    Iran allows ethnic Armenians to mark alleged genocide Tehran, April
    23, IRNA
    Armenians-Rally-Iran

    Iran Saturday gave green light to its Armenian community to mark the
    90th anniversary of the alleged massacre of their ancestors by the
    Ottoman Turks during World War I.

    The authorization, issued by a commission which has representative
    from the government as well as the Judiciary and the legislature,
    will allow Iran's Armenians, reportedly numbering around 250,000, to
    commemorate the occasion along with the rest of their kins across the
    world on Sunday.

    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.

    Efforts by the Armenian community, which is represented by two MPs in
    the Iranian parliament, have led nowhere so far while they have
    pressed the government here to recognize the killings as genocide.

    Tehran, however, enjoys close relations with Yerevan, with the two
    neighbors having signed a deal for the transfer of the Iranian gas to
    Armenia through a pipeline.

    This has irked Shia-dominated Azerbaijan, the same dominant Muslim
    faith in Iran, which has long-simmering tensions with Armenia over
    the disputed enclave of Karabakh in the volatile Caucasus.

    Armenia has controlled Karabakh and seven surrounding regions which
    make up 14 percent of Azerbaijan's internationally recognized
    territory since the two former Soviet republics ended large-scale
    hostilities with a ceasefire in 1994.
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