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Armenia to mark slayings, pressure on Turkey to admit genocide

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  • Armenia to mark slayings, pressure on Turkey to admit genocide

    Agence France Presse
    April 23 2005

    Armenia to mark Ottoman slayings, pressure on Turkey to admit 'genocide'


    YEREVAN, April 23 (AFP) - 13h35 - Huge crowds of Armenians were
    expected to descend on the capital Yerevan on Sunday to commemorate
    the 90th anniversary of mass killings by Ottoman Turks, as pressure
    mounted on Turkey to recognise the episode as genocide.

    Organizers of a march predict that 1.5 million people, including
    thousands of diaspora Armenians, will attend -- getting on for half
    of the population in this tiny Caucasus country on the eastern border
    of Turkey.

    The events being commemorated are the mass expulsion and mass deaths
    of Christian Armenians in what was then the Ottoman Empire at the
    time of World War I.

    It was on April 24, 1915 that the Ottoman Turkish authorities
    arrested some 200 Armenian community leaders in the start of what
    Armenia and many other countries say was an organized genocidal
    campaign to eliminate ethnic Armenians from the Ottoman Empire during
    World War I.

    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.

    But this is not simply a debate over history.

    The row over whether or not to call the killings genocide has
    embarrassed Turkey as it readies for the start of European Union
    accession talks later this year.

    Armenian hopes that their mass march on Sunday will increase the
    pressure seem to be bearing fruit.

    On Saturday, the Conference of European Churches called on Turkey to
    recognise the genocide claim.

    The previous day, French President Jacques Chirac accompanied
    Armenian President Robert Kocharyan to a Paris monument for victims
    of the massacre.

    And in Germany, members of parliament from across the political
    spectrum appealed to Turkey to accept the massacre of Armenians as
    part of its history, saying this would help its EU aspirations.

    Polish Nobel laureate and former president Lech Walesa went further,
    saying Armenians had the right to demand that the European Union bar
    Turkey from joining the bloc unless it admitted to genocide. "It is a
    just claim of the Armenians," he said.

    Ankara responded to this week's run-up to the anniversary with
    apparently greater willingness to review its history.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan proposed recently the
    creation of a joint Armenian-Turkish commission to review the issue,
    though officials expressed confidence that the study would confirm
    Turkey's current position.

    "Turkey is ready to face its history, Turkey has no problem with its
    history," Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said.

    The killings have already been acknowledged as genocide by a number
    of countries, including France, Canada and Switzerland, but not by
    Israel and the United States, which enjoy strong strategic relations
    with Turkey.

    Ankara recognized Armenia's independence when it broke away from the
    Soviet Union in 1991 but has refused to establish diplomatic
    relations because of the genocide row.

    In 1993, Turkey shut its border with Armenia in a show of solidarity
    with its close ally Azerbaijan, another ex-Soviet republic in the
    Caucasus, which was at war with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh
    enclave.
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