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Armenia marks 90th anniversary of mass killings

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  • Armenia marks 90th anniversary of mass killings

    Armenia marks 90th anniversary of mass killings

    AP Worldstream
    Apr 24, 2005

    AVET DEMOURIAN


    Armenia prepared to mark the 90th anniversary of the mass killings of
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire on Sunday, with tens of thousands
    expected to visit the memorial to the dead.

    Armenia accuses Turkey of genocide in the killings of up to 1.5
    million Armenians, during World War I and the collapse of the Ottoman
    Empire, as part of a campaign to force them out of eastern Turkey.

    Turkey rejects the claim, saying the number of deaths is inflated and
    that Armenians were killed or displaced in civil unrest during the
    collapse of the empire.

    On the eve of the commemoration marking the start of the killings,
    people bringing flowers and wreaths visited the country's monument to
    the dead.

    Several thousand students gathered in a square in central Yerevan
    before marching late Saturday to the hilltop memorial.

    Authorities said they expected 1.5 million Armenians _ almost half of
    the landlocked ex-Soviet country's population _ and thousands from the
    Armenian diaspora to visit the site Sunday. Churches and monasteries
    in the Orthodox Christian nation, and churches in more than 100 other
    countries with Armenian communities, were holding special services.

    At 7:00 p.m. (1400 GMT) a minute of silence would be observed across
    Armenia, and inhabitants of Yerevan were asked to light a candle at
    nightfall and place it on a window sill in memory of the victims.

    Polish lawmakers recognized the mass killing as a genocide Tuesday _ a
    decision condemned by Ankara the next day. France and Russia already
    have declared the killings a genocide, and there is strong pressure
    from Armenian diaspora groups on the U.S. Congress to do the same.

    Turkey has no diplomatic ties with Armenia, but called earlier this
    month for the two countries to jointly research the killings. However,
    Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan said in February that
    Armenia had no intention of conducting additional research on an issue
    it regarded as historical fact.

    The issue is extremely sensitive in Turkey, and Turks in the past
    could face prosecution for saying the killings were genocide. But
    recently, facing EU pressure, Turkey has been opening up on the
    subject.

    Last year, French President Jacques Chirac told Turkey it would have
    to recognize the mass killings as genocide if it wanted to become a
    member of the European Union, insisting the French would otherwise
    vote Turkey out in a referendum.
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