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Russia: Ottoman Empire: Turkey is to admit genocide

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  • Russia: Ottoman Empire: Turkey is to admit genocide

    PRAVDA, Russia
    April 25 2005

    Ottoman Empire: Turkey is to admit genocide

    10:11 2005-04-25
    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.

    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, tells the
    Trelegraph.
    Turkey acknowledges that large numbers of Armenians died, but says
    the figures cited today are inflated and that the deaths occurred in
    the civil unrest during the disintegration of the troubled Ottoman
    Empire during the First World War.

    Canada, France, Russia and many other countries have already declared
    the killings were genocide.

    Armenians say that no country stood up to protect their citizens as
    the slaughter continued until 1923.

    However, today France is suggesting it will block Turkey's entry into
    the European Union until the genocide is recognized.

    Armenia and Turkey have no diplomatic relations. Turkey shut the
    border in 1993 out of solidarity with Azerbaijan, when it was
    fighting a territorial war with Armenia.

    A Canadian parliamentary delegation is in Armenia this weekend to
    take part in events. The delegation, including MPs Madeleine
    Dalphond-Guiral and Jim Karygiannis, met with Armenian Foreign
    Minister Vartan Oskanian Saturdaym, publishes CTV.
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