THE WASHINGTON POST CONFIRMS FACT OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
By Hakob Chakrian
Azg/arm
8 March 05
According to the March 6 issue of CNN-Turk, The Washington Post,
referring to the Committee of Conscience at the Washington Museum of
Genocide published the "List of the Genocides and the Crimes against
Humanity." It is stated in the preface of the publication that the
mass genocides of civilians and the other crimes against humanity were
committed in the course of bloody wars in the last century. Here is the
probable number of the victims. We can never know the real indicators."
The abovementioned list was published after the preface. Turkey
occupied the first place in the list. It was written in the first
place of the victimsâ~@~Y list: "Turkishâ~@~SArmenians, 1915-18. 1,5
million." In other words, The Washington Post recognized the Armenian
Genocide through this publication. The genocide in Ukraine in 1923-33
when 7 million people died of hunger occupied the second place in
the list. Next comes the genocide of 300.000 Chinese in Japan in 1937
and the Genocide of 6 millions of Jews in Nazi Germany in 1938-45.
The list also includes the genocide of 2 million people in Cambodia
in 1975-79, the Genocide of 200 thousand people in Bosnia, in 1992-95,
as well as the Genocide of 800 thousand people in Rwanda in 1994.
--Boundary_(ID_6qwrljGg4+qJ9lw8TZkLOA)--
By Hakob Chakrian
Azg/arm
8 March 05
According to the March 6 issue of CNN-Turk, The Washington Post,
referring to the Committee of Conscience at the Washington Museum of
Genocide published the "List of the Genocides and the Crimes against
Humanity." It is stated in the preface of the publication that the
mass genocides of civilians and the other crimes against humanity were
committed in the course of bloody wars in the last century. Here is the
probable number of the victims. We can never know the real indicators."
The abovementioned list was published after the preface. Turkey
occupied the first place in the list. It was written in the first
place of the victimsâ~@~Y list: "Turkishâ~@~SArmenians, 1915-18. 1,5
million." In other words, The Washington Post recognized the Armenian
Genocide through this publication. The genocide in Ukraine in 1923-33
when 7 million people died of hunger occupied the second place in
the list. Next comes the genocide of 300.000 Chinese in Japan in 1937
and the Genocide of 6 millions of Jews in Nazi Germany in 1938-45.
The list also includes the genocide of 2 million people in Cambodia
in 1975-79, the Genocide of 200 thousand people in Bosnia, in 1992-95,
as well as the Genocide of 800 thousand people in Rwanda in 1994.
--Boundary_(ID_6qwrljGg4+qJ9lw8TZkLOA)--