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Armenians refuse to let genocide be forgotten

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  • Armenians refuse to let genocide be forgotten

    Armenians refuse to let genocide be forgotten

    By Nick Allen in Moscow and Amberin Zaman in Ankara

    The Daily Telegraph/UK
    (Filed: 25/04/2005)

    Hundreds of thousands gathered in Yerevan yesterday to mark 90 years
    since the murder of up to 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman empire
    and to add their voices to an international campaign to press Turkey
    to admit genocide.

    Authorities led by President Robert Kocharyan hoped for 1.5 million
    people to visit a giant hilltop memorial in the capital of Armenia as
    the former Soviet republic seeks international recognition of the
    genocide of its people under Turkish rule.


    "Recognition and condemnation is not just an issue for Armenia today
    but one of international politics," Mr Kocharyan said, as streams of
    people filed to the site.

    Many members of the Armenian diaspora worldwide converged on Yerevan
    for remembrance ceremonies and to join the Christian republic's 3.8
    million inhabitants in a minute of silence at 7pm.

    While Turkey acknowledges the tragedy of hundreds of thousands of
    deaths, it denies that there was a state-sponsored extermination plan,
    a stance that has complicated its hopes of joining the European
    Union. Accession talks are due to start this year.

    France, one of 15 countries to recognise the Armenian genocide, has
    called on Turkey to make an effort to set the record straight before
    it can join the union.

    Faced with growing pressure from the EU, Turkey has for the first time
    invited international scrutiny of its past.

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, wrote to the Armenian leader
    this month proposing a joint commission to investigate the claims of
    genocide. He said: "Teams of historians from both sides should conduct
    studies in [Turkey's] archives.

    "We do not want future generations to live under the shadow of
    continued hatred and resentment."

    Western diplomats welcomed the move as a breakthrough while critics
    have shrugged it off as a ploy, saying that incriminating documents
    have been purged from the Ottoman archives.

    Mr Kocharyan, who has not officially responded to Mr Erdogan's letter,
    told a Russian television channel that its contents did not "offer
    hope that our problems will be solved any time soon".

    On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Turkish government arrested hundreds of
    Armenian intellectuals and community leaders, most of whom were
    quickly executed. That was followed by the mass relocation of ethnic
    Armenians from Anatolia through desert to Mesopotamia and what is
    today Syria.

    Starvation, disease, attacks by bandits and the brutality of the
    escorting troops resulted in mass fatalities over the next two years.

    Western sources estimate there were at least one million deaths in
    what has been widely referred to as the first genocide of the 20th
    century, though Armenians put the figure at 1.5 million.

    Ankara maintains that 300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were
    killed in "civil strife" when the Armenians rose against their Ottoman
    rulers and sided with invading Russian troops.

    In one key change, EU-inspired laws have enabled a small and vocal
    group of Turkish academics and intellectuals to challenge the official
    version of what happened in 1915.
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