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India: Armenians Mark 90th Anniversary of Mass Killings in Turkey

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  • India: Armenians Mark 90th Anniversary of Mass Killings in Turkey

    Keralanext, India
    April 24 2005

    Armenians Mark 90th Anniversary of Mass Killings in Turkey


    [World News] YEREVAN, Armenia - Armenians on Sunday marked the 90th
    anniversary of the mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire,
    vowing to press their case to have the killings recognized by Turkey
    and the world as a genocide. Tens of thousands of people, waving
    flags and carrying flowers, streamed through the Armenian capital and
    marched up to a massive hilltop granite memorial to hear speeches and
    prayers.

    Weeping mourners filed into the circular block memorial, laying
    carnations on a flat surface surrounding a flame. A choir in black
    sang hymns as the crowd filed past, some carrying umbrellas against
    the sun.

    The country will observe a minute of silence at 7 p.m. and Yerevan
    residents will place candles on window sills in memory of the
    victims.

    Ottoman authorities began rounding up intellectuals, diplomats and
    other influential Armenians in Istanbul on April 24, 1915, as
    violence and unrest grew, particularly in the eastern parts of the
    country.

    Armenia says up to 1.5 million Armenians ultimately died or were
    killed over several years as part of a genocidal campaign to force
    them out of eastern Turkey. Turkey acknowledges that large numbers of
    Armenians died, but says the overall figure is inflated and that the
    deaths occurred in the civil unrest during the collapse of the
    Ottoman Empire.

    France, Russia and many other countries have already declared the
    killings were genocide; the United States, which has a large Armenian
    diaspora, has not.

    Turkey, which has no diplomatic ties with Armenia, is facing
    increasing pressure to fully acknowledge the event, particularly as
    it seeks membership in the European Union. The issue is extremely
    sensitive in Turkey and Turks have faced prosecution for saying the
    killings were genocide.

    Ankara earlier this month called for the two countries to jointly
    research the killings.
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