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China daily: Ottoman massacre of Armenians remembered across Europe

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  • China daily: Ottoman massacre of Armenians remembered across Europe

    China Daily
    April 25 2005


    Ottoman massacre of Armenians remembered across Europe
    (Agencies)
    Updated: 2005-04-25 09:24


    The Armenian community in France and elsewhere in Europe held solemn
    masses, marches and memorials on Sunday to mark the 90th anniversary
    of mass killings by Ottoman Turks which a growing number of countries
    have recognised as a genocide.

    The Parisian landmark of Notre Dame cathedral hosted a requiem mass
    Sunday and many other gatherings took place across the city.

    Some 350,000 ethnic Armenians live in France.

    The mass was followed by a meeting at an Armenian monument where on
    Friday French President Jacques Chirac and Armenian President Robert
    Kocharian placed a wreath.

    French Socialist Party leader Francois Hollande told the gathering of
    3,000, mostly Armenians, that he would propose a law in parliament to
    penalize those who deny the genocide.

    "The Armenian genocide was the first of the 20th century, but, alas,
    not the only one. The Armenian cause is not only for Armenians, but
    for all those who are committed to human rights and the recognition
    of genocide," Hollande said.

    The protesters later marched to the capital's famed Champs Elysees
    avenue and the nearby Turkish embassy.

    "This is a protest march against Turkey, which continues to reject it
    was a genocide," said Alain Saboundjian, a spokesman for an Armenian
    group in France.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen perished in
    orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire was
    falling apart. Ankara counters that 300,000 Armenians and thousands
    of Turks were killed in "civil strife" during World War I.

    Some 80,000 Armenians live in the Mediterranean port of Marseille,
    where the cornerstone of an Armenian monument due to be inaugurated
    next year was put in place Sunday. The stone included written
    messages from some of the region's ethnic Armenian children.

    "We had to wait until 2001 for France to recognise the Armenian
    genocide. How long will it be before Turkey does?," said regional
    politician Michel Vauzelles, who addressed the crowd of several
    thousand gathered for the occasion.

    A requiem mass and a march to a proposed site of a genocide memorial
    took place in the central city of Lyon, while a wreath was placed at
    a war memorial in the northeastern city of Strasbourg.

    Armenian religious and community leaders headed a cortege of around
    1,000 people in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv carrying candles
    and red carnations.

    "We want Turkey and other countries who have not already recognised
    the genocide to do so," said Karapiet Bagratouni, one of 3,000
    Armenians in the city.

    Greece recognised the massacres as a genocide in 1997 when it named
    April 24 as "The memorial day of the genocide of Armenians by the
    Turkish regime" and in Athens on Sunday a crowd of 500 including
    diplomats and Greek officials placed a wreath at a war memorial.

    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.

    In Germany this week 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.

    On Tuesday, Poland joined a list of 15 countries that have officially
    acknowledged the killings as genocide. Russia, the UN and the
    European parliament all recognise the massacres as genocide.

    Photo 1: Visiting Armenian President Robert Kotcharian and his French
    counterpart, Jacques Chirac, background, stand before the Armenian
    Monument in Paris, after laying a wreath Friday, April 22, 2005. This
    weekend Armenia marks the 90th anniversary of what it calls the
    genocide perpetrated by Turkey between 1915 and 1917, killing up to
    1.5 million Armenians. Turkey rejects the claim, saying the number of
    deaths is inflated and that the victims were killed in civil unrest
    during the collapse of the empire.[AP]

    Photo 2: People attend commemorations marking the 90th anniversary of
    Armenian genocide in Paris.[AFP]

    Photo 3: Armenians visit the memorial to the dead to mark the 90th
    anniversary of the mass killing of Armenians in Yerevan, April 24,
    2005. Hundreds of thousands of people clutching tulips, carnations
    and daffodils climbed a hill in Armenia's capital on Sunday to lay
    wreaths and remember the 1.5 million they say were killed 90 years
    ago in Ottoman Turkey. From the top the crowds could see the heights
    of Mount Ararat now in eastern Turkey, the region where Armenia says
    its people were slaughtered in a deliberate genocide during the chaos
    surrounding the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire. The mountain is
    a potent symbol for the Christian nation but it lies out of reach
    across a fortified frontier.[Reuters]

    Photo 4: A violinist performs in front of the Eiffel tower during the
    commemorations of the national day of remembrance for the victims and
    heroes of deportation, which is part of the 60th anniversary of the
    liberation of the concentration camps, in Paris April 24, 2005.
    [Reuters]

    http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2005-04/25/content_437194.htm
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